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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69945 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69945)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tahiti; the island paradise, by
-Nicholas Senn
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Tahiti; the island paradise
-
-Author: Nicholas Senn
-
-Release Date: February 4, 2023 [eBook #69945]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: James Simmons
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TAHITI; THE ISLAND
-PARADISE ***
-
-TAHITI THE ISLAND PARADISE
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-This book was transcribed from scans of the original found at the
-Internet Archive. Variant spellings are not corrected. Some
-illustrations are rotated.
-
-
-
-
-
-TAHITI
-
-THE
-
-ISLAND PARADISE
-
-BY
-
-NICHOLAS SENN, M. D., Ph. D., LL. D., C. M.
-
-Professor of Surgery in the University of Chicago
-
-Professor and Head of the Surgical Department in Rush Medical College
-
-Surgeon-in-Chief of St. Joseph's Hospital
-
-Attending Surgeon of the Presbyterian Hospital
-
-Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief of the Operating Staff with the Army in
-
-the Field during the Spanish-American War
-
-Surgeon-General of Illinois
-
-WITH FIFTY HALF-TONE ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-CHICAGO
-
-W. B. CONKEY COMPANY
-
-
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1906,
-
-BY
-
-W. B. CONKEY COMPANY
-
-PREFACE
-
-The far-away little island of Tahiti is the gem of the South Pacific
-Ocean. If any place in this world deserves to be called a paradise,
-Tahiti can make this claim. This charming spot in the wide expanse of
-the peaceful ocean has attractions which we look for in vain anywhere
-else. From a distance, the grandeur of its frowning cliffs rivets the
-eye, and, in coming nearer, its tropic beauty charms the visitor and
-imprints upon his memory pictures single and panoramic that neither
-distance nor time can efface. The scenic beauty of this island is
-unsurpassed. The calming air, redolent with the perfume of fragrant
-flowers of exquisite beauty, on the seashore, in the valleys and on the
-precipitous mountain sides; the luxuriant vegetation; the forest
-fruit-gardens and the sweet music of the surf remind one of the original
-habitation of man. The natives, a childlike people, friendly, courteous
-and hospitable, are the happiest people on earth, free from care and
-worries which in other less favored parts of the world make life a
-drudgery.
-
-Tahiti is the only place in the world where the people are not obliged
-to work. The forests furnish bread and fruit and the sea teems with
-fish. The climate is so mild that the wearing of clothing is rather a
-matter of choice than of necessity, and the bamboo huts that can be made
-with little or no expense in half a day with the willing help of the
-neighbors, meet all the requirements of a home. The stranger will find
-here throughout the year a climate and surroundings admirably adapted to
-calm his nervous system and procure repose and sleep.
-
-In writing this little book I have made free use of the "Memoirs of
-Arrii Taimai E., Marama of Eimeo, Terii rere of Tooarai, Terii nui of
-Tahiti, Tauraatua I Amo" (Paris, 1901). The authoress was the mother of
-Tati, one of the most influential present chiefs of Tahiti, and, as her
-several titles show, she was of noble birth. She was an eye-witness of
-many of the most stirring political events in the history of the island.
-Only fifty copies of this book were printed and only three remained in
-possession of her son. He was kind enough to give me one of them, which,
-after making liberal use of it, I presented to the library of the
-University of Chicago, through its late lamented president, Dr. W. R.
-Harper. I also acknowledge my indebtedness to the works of Captain Cook,
-"A Voyage to the Pacific" (London, 1784), and to the book of Baron Ferd.
-von Mueller, "Select Extra-tropical Plants" (Melbourne, 1885).
-
-N. Senn.
-
-Chicago, 1906.
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- - PREFACE
- - TAHITI THE ISLAND PARADISE
- - THE ISLAND OF TAHITI
- - OCEAN VOYAGE
- - THE ATOLL ISLANDS
- - THE LANDING AT PAPEETE
- - THE CITY OF PAPEETE
- - TOPOGRAPHY OF THE ISLAND
- - THE CLIMATE
- - HISTORY OF THE ISLAND
- - POMARE, THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TAHITI
- - MISSIONARY RULE
- - WARS BETWEEN PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC MISSIONARIES
- - THE LAST WAR
- - THE NATIVES
- - FOREIGNERS IN TAHITI
- - BUSINESS IN TAHITI
- - OLD TAHITI
- - RELIGION OF THE NATIVES
- - THE INSIGNIA OF TAHITIAN ROYALTY
- - DISEASES OF TAHITI
- - PRESENT PREVAILING DISEASES
- - THE KAHUNA OR NATIVE DOCTOR
- - PHYSICIANS IN TAHITI
- - HÔPITAL MILITAIRE
- - THE ISLAND OF PLENTY
- - TAHITI'S NATURAL BREAD SUPPLY
- - THE COCOANUT, THE MEAT OF THE TAHITIANS
- - THE COCOA-PALM
- - THE FORESTS OF TAHITI
- - NOTED FOREST TREES OF TAHITI
- - VANILLA CULTIVATION IN TAHITI
- - THE RURAL DISTRICTS
- - POINT VENUS
- - FAUTAHUA VALLEY
- - VILLAGE OF PAPARA
- - IORANA!
- - ADDENDA
- - THE STORY OF ARIITAIMAI OF TAHITI
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-- The Royal Family
-- Harbor and Principal Port of Papeete
-- Lighthouse, and Cook Monument at Haapape
-- King Pomare V
-- Pomare IV
-- View of Moorea
-- Tahiti from the Harbor of Papeete
-- In the Shadow of the Palm Forest
-- The S. S. "Mariposa" Leaving the Harbor of Papeete
-- Royal Palace (Headquarters of the Governor)
-- Avenue of Purranuia, Papeete
-- Native Village by the Sea
-- Native Hut close by the Sea
-- Prince Hinoi
-- A Tahitian Home
-- Tahitian Bamboo House
-- Tomb of the Last King of Tahiti, Pomare V
-- Tahitian Women in Ancient Native Dress
-- Tahiti Girls in Native Dress
-- A Group of Native Girls
-- Native Girl in Modern Dress
-- Tahitian Ladies in Zulu Dress
-- Native Musicians and Native Dance
-- Tahitian Girl in Native Festive Dress
-- At Home
-- A Home by the Sea — Raiatea
-- Fisherman's Home
-- Native Settlement
-- Group of Tahitian Children
-- A Case of Far-Advanced Leprosy Affecting All Limbs
-- A Leper of Tahiti
-- Military Hospital in Papeete
-- Tahitian Fruit Vender
-- Preparing Breadfruit
-- Sapodilla
-- Copra Establishment
-- Government Wharf — Papeete
-- Corner in Papeete
-- A View of Fautahua Valley
-- Avenue of Fautahua
-- Cascade of Fautahua
-- Bridge across Fautahua near Waterfall
-- Lagoon and Reef on the Ninety-Mile Road
-- On the Ninety-Mile Road
-- Fishermen of Papeete
-- Tahitian Canoe with Outrigger
-- Two Papaya Trees
-- Picking Cocoanuts
-- Alligator Pear Tree
-- Ancient Masked Warriors
-
-
-
-TAHITI THE ISLAND PARADISE
-
-When the Almighty Architect of the universe created the earth we
-inhabit, He manifested His wisdom, goodness and foresight in adapting,
-in a most admirable manner, the soil, climate, and animal and vegetable
-life for the habitation of man, the supreme work of creation. By the
-gradual and progressive geographical distribution of man over the
-surface of the earth, he has become habituated to diverse climates and
-environments, and has found conditions most congenial to his comfort and
-the immediate necessities of life.
-
- In cold, laborious climes, the wintry North
-
- Brings her undaunted, hardy warriors forth,
-
- In body and in mind untaught to yield,
-
- Stubborn of soul, and steady in the field;
-
- While Asia's softer climate, form'd to please.
-
- Dissolves her sons in indolence and ease.
-
- LUCANUS.
-
-It required centuries for the Esquimau to become acclimated to the
-inhospitable polar regions, and make them his favorite abode; the people
-who drifted toward the equator gradually became inured to the climate of
-the tropics and accustomed to the manner of living in countries where
-the perennial heat paralyzes the physical and mental energies, and
-undermines the health of strangers coming from a more temperate climate.
-Nature has made ample provision for man in all habitable parts of the
-earth. The regions of ice and snow are inhabited by fur-bearing animals,
-and, at certain seasons of the year, are frequented by a large variety
-of aquatic birds in great abundance, which supply the natives with food
-and clothing, while in the tropics, man has little or no need of fuel
-and clothing, and, with very little exertion, he can subsist on the
-fruits of the forests, and on the food so liberally supplied by the sea.
-
-The intensity of the struggle for life increases with the distance north
-and south from the temperate zones, where climatic conditions
-necessitate active exercise and where the necessities of life can only
-be obtained by the hardest kind of labor. The climate of the tropics, on
-the other hand, is very generous to man. The forests are rich in fruit
-yielding trees which Nature plants, which receive little or no care, yet
-which bear fruit throughout the year. Wherever the cocoa-palm grows in
-abundance, there can be no famine, because this tree yields a rich
-harvest of nutritious fruit from one end of the year to the other
-without fail, as it is never affected to any considerable extent by
-drouth and other conditions which so often bring failure to the orchards
-in more temperate climates. The continuous summer and the wonderful
-fertility of the soil in tropic and subtropic countries reward richly
-the labor of the husbandman by two and sometimes three harvests a year,
-as nature's forces require no rest, no slumber there.
-
-Life in a changeable, severe climate is full of hardships; in the
-tropics, of ease and leisure. The nearer we come to the tropics, the
-closer we approach the conditions of primitive man. The necessities of
-life increase as we recede on either side of the equatorial line. The
-dreamy, easy, care-free life in the tropics is in strong contrast with
-the severe and arduous struggles for existence in countries less favored
-by the resources of nature.
-
-Among the trees in the Garden of Eden, the palm tree was undoubtedly the
-most beautiful, and it remains to-day the queen of the forests of the
-seacoast in the tropics. The palm-clad isles of the South Sea bear a
-closer resemblance to the description of the Garden of Eden than any
-other of the many parts of the world that I have ever seen; and of
-these, Tahiti is a real paradise on earth. There is no country nor other
-isle where Nature has been so liberal in the distribution of her gifts.
-No other island can compare in natural beauty with Tahiti, the gem of
-the South Pacific Ocean. It is the island where life is free of care. It
-is the island where the natives are fed, clothed and housed by nature.
-It is the island where man is born, eats his daily bread without being
-forced to labor, sleeps and dreams away his life free from worry, and
-enjoys the foretaste of the eternal paradise before he dies. It is the
-island which must have been born
-
- In the morning of the world,
-
- When earth was nigher heaven than now.
-
- BROWNING.
-
-It is the island of which the poet must have been musing when he wrote:
-
- Amid an isle around whose rocky shore
-
- The forests murmur and the surges roar,
-
- A goddess guards in her enchanted dome.
-
- POPE.
-
-THE ISLAND OF TAHITI
-
-About three thousand six hundred miles south by southwest from San
-Francisco are the Society Islands, a small archipelago in the South
-Pacific Ocean, in latitude 16 to 18 degrees south, longitude 148 to 155
-degrees west. Captain Cook named this group in honor of the Royal
-Society of London. The largest two of these islands, Tahiti and Moorea,
-are of volcanic origin, mountainous and heavily timbered; the remaining
-islands are small, low, of coral origin, and are called atolls. In
-approaching the archipelago from San Francisco, a few of these
-palm-fringed atoll islands come first into view, forming a pleasing
-foreground to the rugged mountains of Tahiti and its smaller neighbor,
-Moorea, which are sighted almost at the same time. After a voyage over
-the desert ocean of thirteen days (all this time out of sight of land),
-to gaze on the most beautiful islands of this group is a source of
-exquisite pleasure.
-
- Sea-girt isles,
-
- That like to rich and various gems, inlay
-
- The unadorned bosom of the deep.
-
- MILTON.
-
-The South Pacific Ocean is the natural home of the coral polyps, which
-are great island-builders, using the volcanic material as a foundation
-for the coral superstructure. As these minute builders can live only in
-shallow water, they use submerged mountain peaks for their foundations,
-converting them into low atolls, and building reefs around the base of
-the high volcanic islands. Most of the Society Islands are of coral
-formation perched upon submerged mountain summits. The island of Tahiti
-is small, of little commercial interest, and hence it is comparatively
-unknown to the masses of the people. Very few who left the schoolroom
-twenty-five years ago would be able to locate it without consulting a
-geography, and many have even forgotten the name. The children fresh
-from school recall it in connection with the difficulty they encountered
-in finding the little dot in the great, trackless South Pacific Ocean,
-surrounded by a group of still smaller specks, representing the
-remainder of the little archipelago to which it belongs.
-
-Tahiti is nearly four thousand miles distant from San Francisco, in a
-southwesterly direction, below the equator, in latitude 17, hence in a
-similar latitude to that of the Hawaiian Islands, which are situated
-about the same distance north of the equator.
-
-
-
-I had heard much of the natural beauty of this far-off island and its
-interesting inhabitants, and decided to spend my midwinter vacation in
-1904 in paying it a visit. Formerly the passage from San Francisco had
-to be made by a schooner, and required several months. For the last four
-years the island has been made readily accessible by a regular steamer
-service. The staunch steamer, _Mariposa_, of the Oceanic Steamship Company
-of San Francisco, sails from that port every thirty-six days, makes the
-trip in twelve or thirteen days, and remains at Papeete, the capital of
-the island, four days, which give the visitor ample time to visit the
-most interesting points and make the desired observations. The track of
-the steamer is over that part of the Pacific Ocean which is
-comparatively free from violent storms, between the storm centers east
-and west from it. The prevailing trade-winds cool off the tropical heat
-in the vicinity of the equator, rendering the voyage at all seasons of
-the year a pleasant one. The steamer has a tonnage of three thousand
-tons, the service is excellent, and the table all that could be desired.
-I know of no better way to spend a short mid-winter vacation than a trip
-to Tahiti, the island paradise, the most interesting and beautiful of
-all islands.
-
-January and February are the months when the fruit is most abundant, and
-the climate most agreeable. The twenty-five days of voyage on the ocean,
-the few days on shore occupied by a study of its natives, their customs,
-manner of living, by visits to the various points of historic interest,
-and by the greatest of all genuine pleasures, the contemplation of
-nature's choicest exhibitions in the tropics, are all admirably adapted
-to procure physical rest and pleasure, and pleasing as well as
-profitable mental occupation. A trip to Tahiti will prove of particular
-benefit to those who are in need of mental rest. The absence of anything
-like severe storms on this trip should be a special inducement, for
-those who are subject to seasickness, to travel there.
-
-The steamer is well adapted for service in the tropics, the cabins are
-roomy and comfortable. Capt. J. Rennie is one of the most experienced
-commanders of the fleet, a good disciplinarian and devoted to the safety
-and comfort of his passengers. While the steamer can accommodate seventy
-cabin passengers, the number seldom exceeds twenty-five. The tourist
-therefore escapes crowding and noise, so trying to the nerves, and so
-common on the transatlantic steamers and other more frequented ocean
-routes.
-
-OCEAN VOYAGE
-
-The steamer _Mariposa_ leaves the San Francisco wharf at eleven o'clock
-a.m.,—an excellent time for the passengers to enjoy the beauties of the
-bay and the Golden Gate, to see the rugged coast of California gradually
-disappear in the distance during the course of the afternoon, and to
-prepare himself for the first night's sleep in the cradle of the deep.
-The second day out, and until the mountains of Tahiti come in sight, the
-traveler will see nothing but the floating tavern in which he lives, its
-inmates, the inky blue ocean, the sky, clouds, and, occasionally,
-sea-gulls, and isolated schools of flying fish. The steamer's track is
-over an unfrequented part of the ocean. The passenger looks in vain for
-a mast or white-winged sails, or puffs of smoke in the distance, sights
-so often seen on more frequented ocean highways. The steamer crosses an
-ocean desert little known, but out of reach of the violent storms, so
-frequent near the coasts, on both sides free from reefs and rocks, as
-this part of the ocean is of unusual depth, amounting in many places to
-three miles. Stranding of the vessel, or collision with others, the
-greatest dangers incident to sea travel, are therefore reduced to a
-minimum on this route. Although this course is an unusually lonely one,
-the interested observer will find much to see and enjoy. The vast
-expanse of the ocean impresses the traveler from day to day and grows
-upon him as the distance from the coast increases.
-
- Illimitable ocean! without bound,
-
- Without dimensions, where length, breadth, and height,
-
- And time, and place, are lost
-
- MILTON.
-
-The boundless ocean desert, mirror-like when at rest, clothed by gentle
-ripples and ceaseless wavelets when fanned by the trade-winds, is a
-picture of peace and contentment.
-
- The winds with wonder whist,
-
- Smoothly the waters kiss'd,
-
- Whispering new joys to the mild ocean.
-
- MILTON.
-
-But even here in the most peaceful part of the Pacific, when angered by
-the fury of a heavy squall, a diminutive storm agitates the waters into
-foam-crested waves, which, for a short time at least, impart to the ship
-an intoxicated gait. The effect of sun, moon and starlight on the
-smooth, undulating, heaving, billowing, tossing, storm-beaten surface of
-the ocean, is marvelous. When all is quiet, and the passenger is only
-conscious of the vibratory movements imparted to the ship by the
-ceaseless action of the faithful screw, and the lights of heaven are
-veiled by a curtain of dark clouds, the beautiful blue gives way to a
-sombre black. When the tropic sun shines with all his force, the color
-of the water fairly vies with the deep blue of the sky, and the nearer
-we approach our destination, the tints of blue grow deeper and deeper,
-until at last they are of perfect indigo.
-
-
-
-The moon and starlight have a magic effect on the surface of the water.
-The long evenings give the passengers the exquisite pleasure of watching
-the journey of the moon across the starlit heavenly dome, growing, night
-after night, from a mere sickle to her full majestic size, and of
-observing the effects of the gradually increasing intensity of the light
-issuing from the welcome visitor of the night, on the glassy mirror of
-water beneath. The star-bedecked pale dome of the tropic sky is, in
-itself, a picture that rivets the attention of the traveler who loves
-and studies the book of nature. The short twilight over, "these blessed
-candles of the night" (Shakespeare) are lighted, and send their feeble
-light down upon the bosom of the ocean.
-
-If the sky is clear, the illuminating power of the moon at its best, and
-the ocean calm, its surface is transformed into a boundless sheet of
-silver. This magic effect of moonlight on the surface of the sleeping
-ocean is magnified by passing fleecy, or dark, storm-threatening clouds.
-The fleeting, fleecy clouds often veil, only in part, the lovely, full
-face of the moon, and through fissures, the rays of light issue, and,
-falling upon the water, are reflected in the form of silvery patches or
-pathways, corresponding in size and outline with the temporary window in
-the passing cloud. It is when the moon is about to be hidden behind a
-dark, impenetrable veil that the spectator may expect to see the most
-wonderful display of pictures above and around him. As the cloud
-approaches the moon, the blue background deepens in color and brilliancy
-and when its dark margin touches the rim of the moon it is changed into
-a fringe of gold or silver; with the disappearance of the moon behind
-the cloud the fringe of the latter is rudely torn away, the water
-beneath is robbed of its carpet of silver, and the captivated observer
-is made aware that the darkness of night is upon him. But the gloom is
-of short duration. A break in the cloud serves as a window through which
-the moon peeps down, with a most bewitching grace, upon the dark surface
-beneath. The prelude to this exhibition appears on the side of the
-temporary frame, in the form of a silver lining which broadens with the
-moving cloud; now the rim of the moon comes into view; slowly, the veil
-is completely thrown aside, and Luna's calm, pale, smiling, full face
-makes its appearance, enclosed in a dark frame with silver margins,
-while, more than likely, she will be attended by a few brilliant stars,
-thus completing the charms and beauty of the picture suspended from the
-heavenly dome. All genuine pleasures of this world are of short
-duration; so with this nocturnal picture painted on the clouds and
-water. The silver rim on one side of the frame of clouds disappears, the
-dark margin increases in width, the moon is obscured, and only a few
-flickering stars remain fixed in the picture.
-
- Surely there is something in the unruffled calm of nature that
- overcomes our little anxieties and doubts: the sight of the deep blue
- sky, and the clustering stars above, seem to impart a quiet to the
- mind.
-
- JONATHAN EDWARDS.
-
-In midocean is the place to view at greatest advantage the gorgeous
-sunrise and sunset of the tropics. To see the sun disappear in the
-distance, where the dome of the sky seems to rest on the bosom of the
-ocean, is a scene which no pen can describe, and which no artist's brush
-has ever reproduced in any degree comparable with the grand reality. The
-canvas of the sky behind the setting glowing orb, and the passing clouds
-in front, above, and beneath it, are painted successively by the
-invisible brush in the unseen hands of the departing artist in colors
-and shades of colors that may well laugh to scorn any and all attempts
-at description or reproduction. The gilded horizon serves as a fitting
-background for the retreating monarch of the day, and the slowly moving
-canvas of clouds transmits his last messages in all the hues of red,
-crimson, pink, and yellow. To observe this immense panorama stretched
-from north to south, and projected toward the east, resting on the
-silvery surface of the rippling ocean, with the ever-varying colors of
-the slowly moving clouds, as seen evening after evening on the Tahitian
-trip, leaves impressions which time can not erase from memory.
-
-Night on board the _Mariposa_ has additional attractions for the
-passengers who appreciate the wonders and beauties of nature. When the
-night is dark, they find a place in the stern of the ship, lean against
-the taffrail, and watch the water agitated into a diminutive storm by
-the powerful screw. There one beholds a sight sufficiently attractive
-and interesting to keep him spellbound for an hour or more. The
-indolent, phosphorescent sea-amoeba has been roused into action by the
-merciless revolutions of the motor of the ship, and emits its diamond
-sparks of phosphorescent light. Thousands of these little beings
-discharge their magic light in the white veil of foam which adorns the
-crests of the storm-beaten surface, in the form of a narrow track as far
-as the eye can reach in the darkness of the night. The flashes of light
-thrown off by these minute, to the naked eye invisible, inhabitants of
-the sea, when angered by the rude action of the screw, appear and
-disappear in the twinkling of an eye. When these tiny, light-producing
-animals are numerous, as is the case in the equatorial region, the
-snow-white veil of foam is richly decorated with diamond sparks which,
-when they coalesce, form flames of fire in the track of the vessel.
-
-
-
-The ocean voyage has occasionally still another surprise in store for
-the traveler when he reaches the South Pacific. A squall is a tempest on
-a small scale. We see in the distance a dark cloud of immense size which
-seems to ride slowly over the surface of the smooth sea. The gentle
-breeze gives way to a strong wind, the surface of the water becomes
-ruffled with whitecaps, the darkness increases, and at irregular
-intervals the threatening, angry cloud is lighted up by chains of
-lightning thrown in all possible directions; these flashes are followed
-by peals of thunder, and by prolonged rumbling, which becomes feebler
-and feebler, and finally dies away far out on the surface of the ocean.
-The steamer penetrates the storm area. Darkness prevails. Gigantic drops
-of rain strike the deck and patter upon the canvas awning, the
-harbingers of a drenching rain.
-
- And now the thick'ned sky
-
- Like a dark ceiling stood; down rush'd the rain impetuous.
-
- MILTON.
-
-The cloud and darkness are left behind, and a clear sky and smooth sea
-ahead greet the passengers. Did you ever see a rainbow at midnight? Such
-an unusual nocturnal spectral phenomenon greeted us in midocean: the
-full moon in the east, the delicate rainbow in its infinite colors
-painted on the clouds in the west. Our captain, who had lived on the
-tropic sea for a quarter of a century, had never seen the like before.
-It was reserved for us to see a rainbow painted by the moon. With such
-pleasant diversions, by day and by night, we soon forget the ocean
-desert, and yet on the last day of the voyage we welcome the sight of
-land.
-
- Be of good cheer, I see land.
-
- DIOGENES.
-
-The vastness of the ocean and the smallness of Tahiti are in strange
-contrast. How the mariner, in setting the compass on leaving the harbor
-of San Francisco, can so unerringly find this little speck in the ocean
-nearly four thousand miles away, is an accomplishment which no one, not
-versed in the science of navigation can fully comprehend. We sighted
-Tahiti during the early part of the forenoon. The peaks of the two
-highest mountains in Tahiti, Oroheua and Aorii, seven to eight thousand
-feet in height, projected spectre-like from the surface of the ocean.
-These peaks appeared as bare, sharp, conical points in the clear sky
-above a mantle of clouds which enveloped the balance of the island. This
-misty draping of the two highest mountains takes place almost every day,
-as the clouds are attracted by the constant moisture of the soil, due to
-the dense forests and luxuriant tropical vegetation.
-
-The next sight of land brought into view the rugged mountains of Moorea
-and a group of small atoll islands. Moorea is in plain view from
-Papeete, and is the second largest of the Society Islands. Before we
-look at Tahiti at close range, let us examine the group of atoll islands
-which the steamer passes close enough to give us a good idea of their
-formation.
-
-THE ATOLL ISLANDS
-
-The atoll islands, so numerous in the South Seas, have a uniform
-conformation, and are of coral, deposited upon submerged summits of
-mountains of volcanic origin. The floor of the Pacific, like many other
-parts of the earth's surface, is undergoing constant changes, increasing
-or diminishing its level. Here and there, at certain intervals, volcanic
-eruptions have created mountains, which, in Hawaii, rise to nearly
-fourteen thousand and, in Tahiti, to over seven thousand feet. Around
-each of these innumerable islands and islets in the great Pacific Ocean
-the coral polyps have a fringing reef of rock. As these minute creatures
-can live only at a depth of twenty to thirty fathoms, and die as soon as
-exposed to the air, their life-work is confined to the coast of volcanic
-islands. Whenever, as it often happened, the island upon which they had
-congregated was slowly sinking, they would elevate their wall to save
-themselves from death in deep water. It is evident that if this process
-continued long enough, the land would entirely disappear and leave a
-submerged circular wall of coral just below the level of the low tide.
-The effects of the waves in breaking off the coral formation, large and
-small, in elevating them, would, in course of time, produce a ring of
-sandy beach, rising above the sea surrounding the central basin, filled
-with salt water entering through one or many open channels. Upon the
-beach, cocoanuts, washed ashore, would find a favorable soil for
-germination, and, ere long, stately palms would fringe the rim of the
-enclosed lagoon. Every atoll island has a peripheral fringe of
-cocoa-palms and a central lagoon which communicates with the ocean by
-one or more channels. Such an island is an atoll, the final stage in the
-disappearance of a volcanic islet from the surface of the sea. Such
-islands are numerous in the Society Islands, and the Paumotuan
-Archipelago consists exclusively of such atoll islands.
-
-
-
-It is interesting to know how these minute coral polyps manage their
-work of island-building, or, rather, island-preservation. Coral
-formation is a calcareous secretion or deposit of many kinds of
-zoöphytes of the class Anthozoa, which assumes infinite and often
-beautiful forms, according to the different laws which govern the manner
-of germination of the polyps of various species. The coral-producing
-zoöphytes are compound animals, which multiply in the very swiftest
-manner, by germination or budding, young polyp buds springing from the
-original polyp, sometimes indifferently from any part of its surface,
-sometimes only from its upper circumference or from its base, and not
-separating from it, but remaining in the same spot when the original
-parent or polyp is dead, and producing buds in their turn. The
-reproductive capacity of these polyps is marvelous and explains the
-greatness of their work in building up whole islands and the countless
-submerged reefs so much dreaded by the mariners of the South Seas. The
-calcareous deposition begins when the zoöphytes are still simple polyps,
-owing their existence to oviparous reproduction, adhering to a rock or
-other substance, to which the calcareous material becomes attached, and
-on which the coral is built up, the hard deposits of past generations
-forming the base to which those of the progeny are attracted. The coral
-formation takes place with astonishing rapidity; under favorable
-circumstances, masses of coral have been found to increase in height
-several feet in a few months, and a channel cut in a reef surrounding a
-coral island, to permit the passage of a schooner, has been blocked with
-coral in ten years. Coral formations have been found immediately
-attached to the land, whilst in many other cases the reef surrounds the
-island, the intervening space, of irregular, but nowhere of great width,
-forming a lagoon or channel of deep water, protected by the reef from
-wind and waves. According to Darwin, this kind of reef is formed from a
-reef of the former merely fringing kind, by the gradual subsidence of
-the rocky basis, carrying down the fringe of coral to a greater depth;
-whilst the greatest activity of life is displayed by polyps of the kind
-most productive of large masses of coral in the outer parts which are
-most exposed to the waves. In this manner he also accounts for the
-formation of true coral islands, or atolls, which consist merely of a
-narrow reef of coral surrounding a central lagoon, and very often of a
-reef, perhaps half a mile in breadth, clothed with luxuriant vegetation
-and the never-absent cocoa-palms, bordered by a narrow beach of snowy
-whiteness, and forming an arc, the convexity of which is toward the
-prevailing wind, whilst a straight line of reef not generally rising
-above the reach of the tide, forms the chord of the arc. The reef is
-generally intersected by a narrow channel into the enclosed lagoon, the
-waters of which are still and beautifully transparent, teeming with the
-greatest variety of fish. Its surface is enlivened by water-fowl, and
-the depth of water close to the precipitous sides of the reef is almost
-always very great. The channels are kept open by the flux and reflux of
-the tide, the current and waves of which are often so swift and high as
-to become a menace to schooners attempting entrance into the lagoon. On
-the beach, soil most conducive to the growth of cocoanut-palms is formed
-by accumulation of sand, shells, fragments of coral, seaweeds, decayed
-leaves, etc. The giant cocoanuts planted in this soil either by the hand
-of man or by the waves washing them ashore, germinate quickly, and in a
-few years the narrow circular strip of land enclosing the lagoon is
-fringed with colonnades of tall fruit-bearing palms. These islands rise
-nowhere more than a few feet above the level of the sea. Sometimes the
-upheaval of coral formation by volcanic action results in the making of
-a real island, in which event the lagoon disappears. Islands with such
-an origin sometimes rise to a height of five hundred feet and often
-exhibit precipitous cliffs and contain extensive caves. I had read a
-description of the Paumotu atoll islands by Stevenson, and consequently
-I was much interested in the little group of atolls we passed before
-coming into full view of Tahiti. As these islands, like all true atolls,
-are only a few feet above the level of the sea, they can not be seen
-from the sea at anything like a great distance. When they were pointed
-out to us by an officer of the steamer, we could see no land; they
-appeared like oases in the desert, green patches in the ocean, due to
-the cocoa-palms which guarded their shores. As we came nearer, we could
-make out the rim of land and the snow-white coral beach. The smallest of
-these atoll islands are not inhabited, but regular visits are made to
-them in a small schooner or native double canoe to harvest and bring to
-market the never-failing crops of cocoanuts.
-
-
-
-THE LANDING AT PAPEETE
-
-As we left the atolls behind us and neared Tahiti, we could see more
-clearly the outlines of the rugged island, disrobed, by this time, of
-its vestments of clouds. From a distance, the carpet of green which
-extends from its base to near the summit of the highest peaks is varied
-here and there by patches of red volcanic earth, thus adding to the
-picturesqueness of the scene. What at first appears as a greensward on
-the shore, on nearer view discloses itself as a broad fringe of
-cocoa-palms, extending from the edge of the ocean to the foot of the
-mountains, and from there well up on their slopes, where they are lost
-in the primeval forest. Above the tree-line, low shrubs and hardy
-grasses compose the verdure up to the bare, brown mountain-peaks. The
-largest trees are seen in the mountains' deep ravines, which are cut out
-of the side of the heights by gushing of cold, clear waters, which drain
-the very heart of the mountains, bounding and leaping over boulders and
-rapids in their race to a resting-place in the near-by calm waters of
-the lagoon. As we came nearer to the island we were able to make out the
-white lighthouse on Point Venus, seven miles from Papeete. Here, Captain
-Cook, during one of his visits to the island, was stationed for a
-considerable length of time for the purpose of observing the transit of
-Venus; hence the name of the point.
-
-Near the harbor, a native pilot came on board, and, by careful
-maneuvering, safely guided the ship through the very narrow channel in
-the reef into the harbor, with the tricolor flying from the top mast.
-From the harbor, the little city of Papeete and the island present an
-inspiring view. A charming islet on the left as we enter the harbor,
-looks like an emerald set in the blue water. It serves as a quarantine
-station, and the little snow-white buildings upon it appear like toy
-houses. The small city is spread out among cocoa-palms, ornamental and
-shade trees. The green of the foliage of these trees is continuous with
-the forest-clad mountains which form the background of the beautiful
-plateau on which the city is built. The harbor of Papeete is land and
-reef-locked, small, but deep enough to float the largest steamers plying
-in the Pacific Ocean. As the steamer came up slowly to the wharf,
-hundreds of people, a strange mixture of natives, half-castes, Europeans
-and Chinese, old and young, dressed in clothes of all imaginable colors,
-red being by far the most predominant, crowded the dock. Many of the
-children were naked, and not a few of the men and boys were unencumbered
-by clothing, with the exception of the typical, much checkered Tahitian
-cotton loin-cloth. A number of handsome carriages brought the élite of
-the city to take part in this most important of all monthly events.
-
- They come to see; they come to be seen.
-
- OVIDIUS.
-
-Custom-house officers, uniformed native policemen, government officials,
-French soldiers and merchants, mingled with the dusky natives and
-contributed much to the uniqueness of the landing-scene. The dense,
-motley crowd was anxious to see and be seen, but was orderly and well
-behaved. The custom-house officers were accommodating and courteous, and
-passed our hand-baggage without inspection. On the wharf was a small
-mountain of cocoanuts, in readiness to be loaded as a part of the return
-cargo of the _Mariposa_.
-
-THE CITY OF PAPEETE
-
-Papeete is the capital of Tahiti, the seat of government of the entire
-archipelago, and the principal commercial city of the French possessions
-in Oceanica. It is a typical city of the South Sea world, as it is
-viewed from the deck of the steamer and while walking or riding along
-its narrow, crooked streets. From the harbor, little can be seen of its
-buildings, except the spire of the cathedral and the low steeples of two
-Protestant churches, the low tower of the governor's palace, formerly
-the home of royalty, the military hospital, the wharf, and a few
-business houses loosely scattered along the principal street, the Quai
-du Commerce that skirts the harbor. The residence part of the city is
-hidden behind towering cocoa-palms and magnificent shade-trees among
-which the flamboyant (burau) trees are the most beautiful. It is
-situated on a low plateau with a background of forest-clad mountains,
-the beautiful little harbor, the spray-covered coral reef, the vast
-ocean and the picturesque outlines of Moorea in front of it.
-
-
-
-Papeete has no sidewalks. The streets are narrow, irregularly laid out,
-and none of them paved. Most of the houses are one-story frame
-buildings, covered with corrugated iron roofs. There are only two or
-three large stores; the remaining business-places are small shops, many
-of them owned and managed by Chinamen. The present population, made up
-of natives of all tints, from a light chocolate to nearly white, six to
-eight hundred whites and about three hundred Chinese, numbers in the
-neighborhood of five thousand, nearly half of the population of the
-entire island. There are about five hundred Chinese in the island, who,
-by their industry and knowledge of business methods, have become
-formidable competitors of the merchants from other foreign countries.
-Their small shops and coffee-houses in Papeete and the country districts
-are well patronized by the natives.
-
-Papeete is the commercial center of Oceanica. There are no department
-stores there. Business is specialized more there than perhaps in any
-other city. All of the shops, even the largest, look small in the eyes
-of Americans. There are dry goods stores, grocery stores, millinery
-shops, two small frame hotels, the Hotel Francais and another smaller
-one, both on the Quai, a few boarding-houses, two saloons, and no bank.
-The scarcity of saloons can be explained by the fact that the natives
-are temperate in their habits. According to a law enforced by the
-government, the native women are prohibited from frequenting such
-places.
-
-The public wash-basin, supplied with running fresh water from a mountain
-stream, is a sight worth seeing. From a dozen to twenty native women,
-and a few soldiers, may be found here almost any time of the day,
-paddling knee-deep in the water, using stones in place of washboards in
-performing their arduous work. This primitive way of washing gives
-excellent results, judging from the snow-white, spotless linen garments
-worn by the Europeans and well-to-do natives.
-
-The little plaza or square in the center of the city is used as a
-market-place where natives congregate at five o'clock in the morning, to
-make their modest purchases of fish, plantain, pineapple, melon or
-preserved shrimp done up in joints of bamboo. This is the place to learn
-what the islanders produce, sell and buy.
-
-The public buildings are well adapted for a tropic climate. The most
-important of these is the palace of the last of the Tahitian kings, now
-used as the office of the government. It is a handsome white building,
-surrounded by ample grounds well laid out, and beautified by trees,
-shrubs and flowers. The government schoolhouse is an enormous frame
-building, resting upon posts, several feet from the ground, with more
-than one-half of its walls taken up by arched windows, the best lighted
-and most thoroughly ventilated building in the city, an ideal
-schoolhouse for the tropics. Among the churches of different
-denominations, the Catholic cathedral is the largest and best, although
-in the States it would not be considered an ornament for a small country
-village.
-
-The city is well supplied with pure water from a mountain stream, but
-lacks a system of sewerage. The gardens and grounds of the best
-residences of the foreigners present an exquisite display of flowers
-that flourish best in the tropic soil, under the invigorating rays of
-the tropic sun, and the soothing effects of the frequent showers of
-rain, which are not limited to any particular season of the year.
-
-Papeete, like all cities in the equatorial region, is a city of supreme
-idleness and freedom from care. The citizens can not comprehend that
-"The great principle of human satisfaction is engagement" (Paley). This
-idleness is inherent in the natives, and under the climatic conditions,
-and I suppose to a certain extent by suggestion, is soon acquired by the
-foreigners. Contentment and absence of anxiety characterize the life of
-the Tahitian. He has no desire to accumulate wealth; he is satisfied
-with little. He is "shut up in measureless content" (Shakespeare); he is
-inspired with the good idea that "he that maketh haste to be rich, shall
-not be innocent" (Proverb xxviii: 20). The merchants open their shops at
-sunrise, lock the doors at ten, retire to their homes for breakfast,
-take their two-hour siesta, return to their business, suspend work at
-five, and the remainder of the day and the entire evening are devoted to
-rest, social visits and divers amusements. The social center of the
-foreigners is the Cercle Bougainville, a small frame building which
-serves the purpose of a club house. Bicycling is a favorite means of
-travel and sport for the Europeans as well as the natives of all
-classes. This vehicle has found its way not only into the capital city
-but also into the country districts throughout the island. The splendid
-macadamized road which encircles the island furnishes a great inducement
-for this sport. Two of the wealthiest citizens travel the principal
-streets in the city and the ninety-mile drive in the most modern fashion
-by riding an automobile.
-
-There are few if any door locks in private residences, hotels and
-boarding-houses, the best possible proof that the inhabitants are
-law-abiding citizens. In the boarding-house in which I lived, the main
-entrance was left wide open during the night, and none of the door locks
-was supplied with a key. The native women wear Mother Hubbard gowns of
-bright calico; the better class of men dress in European fashion, while
-the laborers and men from the country districts wear a pareu
-(loin-cloth) of bright calico, with or without an undershirt. The
-average Tahitian does not believe in:
-
- We are captivated by dress.
-
- OVIDIUS.
-
-
-
-TOPOGRAPHY OF THE ISLAND
-
- Into the silent land!
-
- Ah, who shall lead us thither?
-
- VON SALIS.
-
-There is no spot on earth more free from care, worry and unrest than the
-island of Tahiti. The abundance with which nature here has provided for
-the wants of man, the uniform soothing climate, the calmness of the
-Pacific Ocean, the pleasing scenery quiet the nerves, induce sleep and
-reduce to a minimum the efforts of man in the struggle for life. It is
-the island of peace, contentment and rest, a paradise on earth.
-
-No writer has ever done justice to the natural beauties of this gem of
-the South Seas. The towering mountains, the tropical forests, the
-numerous rippling streams of crystal water, shaded dark ravines, the
-palm-fringed shore, the lagoons with their quiet, peaceful, clear waters
-painted in most exquisite colors of all shades of green, blue and salmon
-by the magic influence of the tropical sun, their outside wall of coral
-reef ceaselessly kissed by the caressing, foaming, moaning surf, the
-near-by picturesque island of Moorea, with its precipitous mountains
-rising from the deep bed of the sea, the flat basin-like, palm-fringed
-atolls in the distance, and the vast ocean beyond, make up a combination
-of pictures of which the mind never tires, and which engrave themselves
-indelibly on the tablet of memory.
-
-Tahiti is a typical mountain island, protected against the aggressive
-ocean by a coral reef which forms almost a complete wall around it,
-enclosing lagoons of much beauty, which teem with a great variety of
-fish. It is thirty-five miles in length, and on an average twelve miles
-in breadth. It is shaped somewhat in the form of an hourglass, the
-narrow part at Isthmus Terrawow. The circuit of the island by following
-the coast is less than one hundred and twenty miles. The ninety-mile
-drive which engirdles the island cuts off some of the irregular
-projections into the sea. The interior is very mountainous and cut into
-ravines so deep that it has never been inhabited to any extent. The
-highest peaks are Orohena and Aorii, from seven to eight thousand feet
-in height, the former cleft into two points of rock which are often
-draped with dark masses of tropic clouds. Numerous other peaks of lesser
-magnitude are crowded together in the center of the island, their broad
-foundations encroaching upon the plain. The people live on the narrow
-strip of low land at the base of the mountains and running down to the
-shore, where the soil is exceedingly fertile and always well watered by
-numerous rivers, brooks and rivulets. Numberless cascades can be seen
-from the ninety-mile drive, leaping over cliffs and appearing like
-silver threads in the dark green of the mountain-sides. The strip of
-arable land at the base of the mountains varies in width from the bare
-precipitous cliffs, without even a beach, to one, or perhaps in the
-widest places, two miles. The larger streams have cut out a few broader
-valleys. It is this narrow strip of land which is inhabited, the little
-villages being usually located near the mouth of a river on the
-coast-line, insuring for the inhabitants a pure water-supply and
-facilities for fresh-water bathing, a frequent and pleasant pastime for
-the natives of both sexes and all ages.
-
-Wherever there is sufficient depth of soil, vegetation is rampant. The
-fertility of the soil and the stimulating effect of constant moisture on
-vegetable life are best seen by the vitality exhibited by the
-fence-posts. I have seen fence-posts a foot and more in circumference,
-after being implanted in the soil, strike root, sprout and develop into
-trees of no small size. The mountains, and more especially the ravines,
-are heavily timbered. There is no place on earth where the scenery is
-more beautiful and sublime than at many points along the ninety-mile
-drive. The lofty mountains, the fertile plain, the many rivers, brooks,
-rivulets and glimpses of foaming cascades, lagoons, of the surf beating
-the coral reef in the distance, the limitless ocean beyond, the
-luxuriant rampant vegetation, the beautiful flowers, the majestic
-palm-trees, the quaint villages and their interesting inhabitants, form
-a picture which is beautiful, and, at the same time, sublime. As a whole
-it is sublime; in detail, beautiful.
-
- Beauty charms, sublimity awes us, and is often accompanied with a
- feeling resembling fear; while beauty rather attracts and draws us
- towards it.
-
- FLEMING.
-
-Let us see how Captain Cook was impressed with Tahiti when he first cast
-his eyes upon this gem of the Pacific:
-
- Perhaps there is scarcely a spot in the universe that affords a more
- luxuriant prospect than the southeast part of Otaheite [Tahiti.] The
- hills are high and steep, and, in many places, craggy. But they are
- covered to the very summits with trees and shrubs, in such a manner
- that the spectator can scarcely help thinking that the very rocks
- possess the property of producing and supporting their verdant
- clothing. The flat land which bounds those hills toward the sea, and
- the interjacent valleys also, teem with various productions that grow
- with the most exuberant vigour; and, at once, fill the mind of the
- beholder with the idea that no place upon earth can outdo this, in the
- strength and beauty of vegetation. Nature has been no less liberal in
- distributing rivulets, which are found in every valley, and as they
- approach the sea, often divide into two or three branches, fertilizing
- the flat lands through which they run.
-
-Tahiti is the same to-day as when Captain Cook visited it for the first
-time. The only decided changes which have taken place since are the
-building up of the capital city Papeete, and the construction of the
-ninety-mile drive. The beauty of the island has been maintained because
-the natives have preserved the magnificent primeval forests. Strip
-Tahiti of its forests and it will be made a desert in a few years.
-Nature relies on the forests to attract the clouds which bring the
-moisture, and assist in the formation and preservation of the soil.
-Remove the trees, and drouth and floods will destroy vegetation, and the
-latter will wash the existing soil into the hungry abyss of the ocean.
-Fertile and beautiful as Captain Cook found Tahiti, he deprecated the
-idea of settling it with whites.
-
- Our occasional visits may, in some respects, have benefited its
- inhabitants; but a permanent establishment amongst them, conducted as
- most European establishments amongst Indian nations have unfortunately
- been, would, I fear, give them just cause to lament that our ships had
- ever found them out. Indeed, it is very unlikely that any measure of
- this kind should ever be seriously thought of, as it can neither serve
- the purposes of public ambition, nor of private avarice; and, without
- such inducements, I may pronounce, that it will never be undertaken.
-
-The island has been invaded and taken by the whites and the results to
-the natives have been in many respects disastrous, which goes to prove
-the correctness of Captain Cook's prophecy.
-
-
-
-THE CLIMATE
-
-The climate of Tahiti, although tropical, is favorably influenced by the
-trade-winds and frequent showers. The breezes from ocean and land keep
-the heated atmosphere in motion, and the frequent rains throughout the
-year have a direct effect in lowering the temperature. The entire island
-from the shore to the highest mountain-peaks, is covered by forests and
-a vigorous vegetation. These retain the moisture and attract the
-pregnant clouds, securing, throughout the year, a sufficient rainfall to
-feed the many mountain streams and water the rich soil of the
-mountain-sides, valleys, ravines and lowlands along the coast. The
-temperature seldom exceeds 90 degrees Fahrenheit, and during the coldest
-months, March and April, it occasionally falls as low as 65 degrees
-Fahrenheit. The atmosphere is charged with humidity, and when this
-condition reaches the maximum degree, the heat is oppressive, more
-especially when there is no land or ocean breeze. If a hotel could be
-built at an elevation of three to four thousand feet above the level of
-the sea, the guests would find a climate which could not be surpassed in
-any other part of the world. A prolonged residence in Papeete or any
-other part of the island near the sea-level is debilitating for the
-whites. Those of the white inhabitants who can afford it, leave the
-island every three or five years and seek recuperation and a renewal of
-energy in a cooler climate, usually in California or Europe. Papeete,
-partially enclosed by mountains, and only a few feet above the level of
-the sea, and on the leeward side of the island, is said to be one of the
-warmest places in the island. The village of Papara gets the full
-benefit of the trade-winds and the land-breeze, and is one of the
-coolest spots in Tahiti. Tahiti's summer-time is our winter. I was
-fortunate in visiting the island during the latter part of January. It
-is the time when Nature makes a special effort here to produce the
-luxuriant vegetation after the drenching rains of December. It is the
-time when the evergreen trees cast off, here and there, a faded leaf, to
-be replaced by a new one from the vigorous unfolding buds. It is the
-season of flowers and the greatest variety of fruits. It may interest
-the reader to know that one day seven different kinds of fruits were
-served at the breakfast-table, a luxury out of reach of our millionaires
-at their homes in the North at that time of the year. For a winter
-vacation, the months of January and February offer the greatest
-inducements. Those who are in need of an ideal mental rest, and are fond
-of a long ocean voyage, and enjoy tropic scenery and the marvelous
-products of the fertile soil of the tropics, should not fail to visit
-Tahiti, the little paradise in the midst of the vast expanse of the
-Pacific Ocean.
-
-HISTORY OF THE ISLAND
-
- History is the witness of the times, the torch of truth, the life of
- memory, the teacher of life, the messenger of antiquity.
-
- CICERO.
-
-It was my privilege during my brief stay in Tahiti to meet Tati Salmon,
-chief of the Papara district. He is a direct descendant of one of the
-two noble families of the island, the Tevas, and one of the most
-prominent and influential citizens of the island. I asked him to what
-race the Tahitians belonged. To this question he had a ready reply. He
-said: "We belong to no race; man was created here; this is the lost
-Garden of Eden." There is much force, if not truth, in this assertion
-when we take into consideration the charming beauty of the island and
-the bounteous provisions which Nature has made here for the existence of
-man. Then, too, the Tahitian is a good specimen of manhood,
-intellectually and physically, far superior to the Negro race and the
-Mongolian. Ariitaimai (Arii Taimai E), the mother of the chief just
-referred to and the authoress of the book mentioned in the preface,
-believes that the Tahitians belong to the great Aryan race, the race of
-Arii, and that their chiefs were Arii, not kings, and the head chiefs,
-Ariirahi—Great Chiefs. It was only the latter who were entitled to wear
-the girdle of red feathers, as much the symbol of their preeminence as
-the crown and sceptre of European royalty. The Tahitians are
-Polynesians, like the inhabitants of most of the South Seas and of
-Hawaii, and there can be but little doubt that the Polynesians belong to
-the Malay race, having migrated from island to island, from west to
-east, by way of Java, Samoa and the Hawaiian Islands. As these voyages
-had to be made by means of frail canoes, we can readily conceive the
-hardships endured by the bold navigators of centuries ago. A story
-current in Tahiti relates that it was thus that the great chief Olopaua
-of Hawaii, driven from home by disastrous floods, bore his wife Lu'ukia
-in the twelfth century, to find a new dwelling place in Tahiti,
-twenty-three hundred miles away. It is said that the chiefess was a
-poetess, a dancer famed for grace, and the inventor of a style of dress
-which is still made by the Hawaiians. Many of the primitive peoples
-trace their origin to a legend which is handed down from generation to
-generation.
-
- In all ages of the world there is nothing with which mankind hath been
- so much delighted as with those little fictitious stories which go
- under the name of fables or apologues among the ancient heathens, and
- of parables in the sacred writings.
-
- BISHOP PORTEUS.
-
-The Tevas of Tahiti have their legend and it is related by Ariitaimai,
-as it has been told for many generations. They take pride in the story
-that they are the direct descendants from the Shark God. The legend
-tells how many centuries ago a chief of Punaauia, by the name of Te
-manutu-ruu, married a chiefess of Vaiari, named Hototu, and had a son,
-Terii te moanarau. At the birth of the child, the father set out in his
-canoe for the Paumotu Islands to obtain red feathers (Ura) to make the
-royal belt for the young prince. The legend begins by assuming that
-Vaiari was the oldest family, with its Maraes, and that Punaauia was
-later in seniority and rank. While Te manutu-ruu was absent on his long
-voyage to the Paumotus, a visitor appeared at Vaiari, and was
-entertained by the chiefess. This visitor was the first ancestor of the
-Tevas. He was only half human, the other half fish, or Shark God; and he
-swam from the ocean, through the reef, into the Vaihiria River, where he
-came ashore, and introduced himself as Vari mataauhoe, and, after having
-partaken of the hospitalities of the chiefess, took up his residence
-with her. But after their intimacy had lasted some time, one day, when
-they were together, Hototu's dog came into the house and showed his
-affection for his mistress by licking her face, or, as we should say
-now, kissed her, although in those days this mark of affection was
-unknown, as the Polynesians instead only touched noses as an
-affectionate greeting. At this the man-shark was so displeased that he
-abandoned the chiefess. He walked into the river, turned fish again and
-swam out to sea. On his way he met the canoe of the Chief Te manutu-ruu
-returning from the Paumotus, and stopped to speak to him. The chief
-invited Vari mataauhoe to return with him, but the man-shark declined,
-giving as his reason that the chiefess was too fond of dogs.
-
-
-
-The legend proves that the natives regarded Vaiari as the source of
-their aristocracy. Papara makes the same claim, for when Vari mataauhoe
-left Hototu he said to her: "You will bear me a child; if a girl, she
-will belong to you and take your name; but if a boy, you are to call him
-Teva; rain and wind will accompany his birth, and to whatever spot he
-goes, rain and wind will always foretell his coming. He is of the race
-of Ariirahi, and you are to build him a Marae which you are to call
-Matava (the two eyes of Tahiti), and there he is to wear the Marotea,
-and he must be known as the child of Ahurei (the wind that blows from
-Taiarapu)." A boy was born, and, as foretold, in rain and wind. The name
-of Teva was given to him; and Matoa was built; and there Teva ruled.
-From this boy came the name Teva; but when and how it was applied to the
-clan no one knows. The members of the tribe or clan believe it must have
-been given by the Arii of Papara or Vaiari. To this day, the Tevas
-seldom travel without rain and wind, so that they use the word Teva
-rarivari—Teva wet always and everywhere. The Vaiari people still point
-out the place where the first ancestor of the clan lived as a child, his
-first bathing place, and the different waters in which he fished as he
-came on his way toward Papara. This legend is to-day as fresh in the
-district of Papara as it was centuries ago. It is but natural that the
-Tevas, one of the two most influential and powerful of the tribes of
-Tahiti, should be anxious to trace their ancestry to a royal origin even
-if the first ancestor should be a man-shark, little remembering that
-
- It is not wealth nor ancestry, but honorable conduct and a noble
- disposition that make men great.
-
- OVIDIUS.
-
-As the Tahitians had no written language before the missionaries visited
-the island, little is known of its earlier history. The history of the
-island since its discovery has been accurately written up by Ariitaimai,
-an eye-witness of many of the most stirring events and on that account
-most to be relied upon, for
-
- The only good histories are those that have been written by the
- persons themselves who commanded in the affairs whereof they write.
-
- MONTAIGNE.
-
-Let us follow her account of the history of the island since its
-discovery by Captain Samuel Wallis, June 18, 1767. The captain made a
-voyage around the world in Her Majesty's ship _Dolphin_, and on his way
-found the island, and called it Otaheite. At that time, Amo was head
-chief of Papara and of the Tevas, or rather his son Teriirere, born
-about 1762, was head chief, and Amo exercised power as his guardian,
-according to native custom, which made the eldest child immediately on
-birth, the head of the family. At that time the power of calling the
-Tevas to conference or war was peculiar to the Papara head chief; the
-military strength of the Tevas was unconquerable, if it could be united;
-but perhaps the most decisive part of every head chief's influence was
-his family connection. Nowhere in the world was marriage a matter of
-more political and social consequence than in Tahiti. Women occupied an
-important position in society and political affairs. The chiefesses held
-the reins of government with as much firmness as the chiefs, and
-commanded the same influence and respect. She was as independent of her
-husband as of any other chief; she had her seat or throne, in the Marae
-even to the exclusion of her husband; and if she were ambitious she
-might win or lose crowns for her children as happened with Captain
-Wallis' friend Oberea, the great-aunt of Ariitaimai Purea, and with her
-niece, Tetuauni reiaiteatea, the mother of the first King Pomare. At the
-time of Wallis' and Cook's visits, Papara was the principal city in
-Tahiti, and Papeete, the present capital city of the French possessions
-in Oceanica, a mere village. The Papara head chief was never the head
-chief of the whole island, but his power and influence were predominant
-throughout the whole island. The kingship which Europeans insisted on
-conferring on him, or on any other head chief who happened for the time
-to rival him, was never accepted by the natives until forced upon them
-by foreign influence and arms. From this it will be seen that before
-European influence made itself felt, the Tahitians were divided into
-tribes ruled by so many chiefs, with a head chief whose influence
-extended over the entire island. The form of native government was very
-simple and had many very commendable features. Wars between the tribes
-and between Tahiti and the neighboring island, Moorea, were, however, of
-frequent occurrence.
-
-
-
-All exact knowledge concerning dates in the history of the island begins
-with June 24, 1767, when Wallis warped his ship into the bay of Matavai,
-the most northerly point of the island. The appearance of the
-foreigners, the first time the natives had ever seen a white man and
-such a great ship, created consternation. Excitement ran high on the
-landing of the crew. The natives attacked them, but their rude
-implements of warfare could not cope with firearms, and they were
-defeated. Two days later, June 26th, the battle was renewed and again
-terminated in the defeat of the natives, promptly followed by sudden
-friendship for their first European visitors. The natives, extremely
-superstitious, were at first suspicious, and it required some time to
-establish free relations between them and the commander and crew of the
-_Dolphin_. Strangely enough, the first native to board the ship was a
-woman. The incident is related by Wallis himself:
-
- On Saturday, the 11th, in the afternoon, the gunner came on board with
- a tall woman, who seemed to be about five and forty years of age, of a
- pleasing countenance and majestic deportment. He told me that she was
- but just come into that part of the country, and that seeing great
- respect paid her by the rest of the natives, he had made her some
- presents; in return for which she had invited him to her home, which
- was about two miles up the valley, and given him some large hogs;
- after which she returned with him to the watering-place and expressed
- a desire to go on board the ship, in which wish he had thought it
- proper, on all accounts, that she should be gratified. She seemed to
- be under no restraint, either from diffidence or fear, when she came
- into the ship, and she behaved all the while she was on board with an
- easy freedom that always distinguishes conscious superiority and
- habitual command. I gave her a large blue mantle that reached from her
- shoulders to her feet, which I drew over her, and tied on with
- ribbons; I gave her also a looking-glass, beads of several sorts, and
- many other things, which she accepted with good grace and much
- pleasure. She took notice that I had been ill, and pointed to the
- shore. I understood that she meant I should go thither to perfect my
- recovery, and I made signs that I would go thither the next morning.
- When she intimated an inclination to return, I ordered the gunner to
- go with her, who, having set her on shore, attended her to her
- habitation, which he described as being very large and well built. He
- said that in this house she had many guards and domestics, and that
- she had another at a little distance which was enclosed in lattice
- work.
-
-This visit opened the island to the Englishmen. Wallis repeatedly refers
-to his first visitor as "my princess, or rather queen." When he came on
-shore the next day he was met by the princess, who ordered that he and
-the first lieutenant and purser, who were also ill, should be carried by
-the people to her home, where they were treated in a most hospitable
-manner. Here is a beautiful instance of natural hospitality, charity and
-gratitude combined; a kindly deed dictated by unselfish motives, an
-exhibition of virtues so rarely met with in the common walks of life.
-
- Hospitality to the better sort and charity to the poor; two virtues
- that are never exercised so well as when they accompany each other.
-
- ATTERBURY.
-
-The princess had full control over the curious, motley crowd, which gave
-way to the strangers by a sign of her hand. The house proved to be the
-Fare-hau, or Council-house, of Haapape, and the princess, as Wallis
-called her, who did not belong to Haapape, but to quite another part of
-the island, was herself a guest whose presence there was due to her
-relationship with the chief.
-
-Wallis left the Island July 27th. His "queen" and her attendants came on
-board and bade him and his crew a most affectionate farewell. Neither
-Wallis, nor Bougainville, who visited Tahiti in April, 1768, eight
-months later, ever learned what her true rank was, or from what part of
-the island she came. According to Ariitaimai, she was her
-great-great-grandaunt Purea, or rather, the wife of her
-great-great-granduncle.
-
-Bougainville named the island New Cytherea, and Commerson, the
-naturalist, charmed by its beauty and astonished at its resources,
-called it Utopia. The latter gave the following romantic description of
-the island and its people in a letter published in the _Mercure de
-France_:
-
- Je puis vous dire que c'est le seul coin de la terre ou habitent des
- hommes sans vices, sans préjugés, sans besoins, sans dissensions. Nés
- sous le plus beau ciel, nourris des fruits d'une terre féconde sans
- culture, régis par des pères de famille plutôt que par des rois, ils
- ne connaissent d'autre dieu que l'Amour. Tous les jours lai sont
- consacrés, toute l'isle son temple, toutes les femmes—me
- demandez-vous? Les rivales des Geôrgiennes en beauté et les sœurs des
- grâces toutes unes.
-
-Such was the simple, innocent, happy island life when Tahiti was
-discovered by the white man, whose pretended object was to bring to the
-natives the benefits of modern civilization. As to the immediate effects
-of European civilization on the morals of the natives, Ariitaimai has
-the following to say in reply to the alleged laxity of Tahitian morals:
-
- No one knows how much of the laxity of morals was due to the French
- and English themselves, whose appearance certainly caused a sudden and
- shocking overthrow of such moral rules as had existed before in the
- island society: and the "supposed" means that when the island society
- as a whole is taken into account. Marriage was real as far as it went,
- and the standard rather higher than that of Paris; in some ways
- extremely lax, and in others strict and stern to a degree that would
- have astonished even the most conventional English nobleman, had he
- understood it
-
-The third European to visit Tahiti was that intrepid explorer, Captain
-Cook, who entered Matavai Bay on the 13th of April, 1769, in Her
-Majesty's bark, the _Endeavor_, on his first voyage around the world. He
-met chief Tootahah, under whose protection he settled on Point Venus. He
-was accompanied by a staff of scientists, among them Joseph Banks and
-Dr. Solander, a Swedish naturalist. Captain Wallis' "queen" was again on
-the shore to meet the strangers. Captain Cook gives a detailed account
-of her visit:
-
- She first went to Mr. Banks' tent at the fort, where she was not
- known, till the master, who knew her, happening to go ashore, brought
- her on board with two men and several women, who seemed to be all of
- her family. I made them all some presents or other, but to Obariea
- (for that was the woman's name) I gave several things, in return for
- which, as soon as I went on shore with her, she gave me a hog and
- several bunches of plantains. These she caused to be carried from her
- canoes up to the fort in a kind of procession, she and I bringing up
- the rear. This woman is about forty years of age, and, like most of
- the other women, very masculine. She is head or chief of her own
- family or tribe, but to all appearance hath no authority over the rest
- of the inhabitants, whatever she might have when the _Dolphin_ was here.
-
-
-
-Cook ascertained at this time, that Obariea was the wife of the most
-influential chief of the island, Oamo, but did not live with him. She
-had two children, a daughter eighteen years old, and a boy of seven, the
-heir to the throne. He says in his Journal:
-
- The young boy above mentioned is son to Oamo and Obariea, but Oamo and
- Obariea do not at this time live together as man and wife, he not
- being able to endure with her troublesome disposition. I mention this
- because it shows that separation in the marriage state is not unknown
- to these people.
-
-When Cook made his second visit to the island, in 1774, he learned that
-Oamo and Obariea, or, as they are called in the genealogy of the Tevas,
-Amo and Purea, had been driven from Papara into the mountains. Vehiatu,
-the victor, made Amo resign, and the regency of that part of the island
-was entrusted to Tootuhah, the youngest brother of the deposed chief.
-
-POMARE, THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TAHITI
-
-The Pomare family are descendants of chiefs called Tu of Faaraoa, one of
-the atoll islands of the Paumotu Archipelago, some two hundred and fifty
-miles northeast of Tahiti. The exact date of the first Tu's arrival in
-Tahiti is unknown. Even the generation can not be fixed. The Pomares
-were always ashamed of their Paumotu descent, which they regarded as a
-flaw in their heraldry, and which was a reproach to them in the eyes of
-the Tahitians, for all Tahitians regarded the Paumotus as savage, and
-socially inferior. The first Tu who came to visit the distant land of
-Tahiti, came in by the Taunoa opening, which is the eastern channel,
-into what is now the harbor of Papeete. Landing at Taunoa a stranger, he
-was invited to be the guest of Manaihiti, who seems to have been a chief
-of Pare. He was adopted by the chief as his brother, and at the death of
-the chief, he became heir and successor in the chief's line. He married
-into the Arue family, which gave his son a claim to the joint chiefdom
-of Pare Arue; and at last his grandson, or some later generation,
-obtained in marriage no less a personage than Tetuaehuri, daughter of
-Taiarapu. One of the members of this family, Teu (born 1720, died 1802)
-made new and important advances in the social and political circles of
-Tahiti by marriage, and became the father of Pomare I. (1743-1803), the
-first king of Tahiti. Teu seems to have been a very clever and cautious
-man. He never assumed to be a great chief or to wear the belt of
-feathers. He was more jealous of his son than of Amo or his son
-Teriirere. His son, Tu, was born about 1743. Related by birth with two
-of the most influential families, he strengthened his native ties by
-marrying Tetuanui-rea-i-te-rai, of the adjoining independent chiefdom of
-Tefauai Ahurai, who was not only a niece of Purea, but quite as
-ambitious and energetic as Purea herself. The English, who could not
-conceive that the Tahitians should be able to exist without some
-pretense of royalty, gave Tu the rank and title of king, notwithstanding
-that he was only one, and at that not the most influential of several
-Arii rahi. To the great dissatisfaction of the other chiefs, Tu received
-the lion's share of presents from Captain Cook. At this action, the
-Ahurai and Attahura people were enraged, and Cook was quite unable to
-understand that they had reason to complain. To them, Cook's partiality
-for Tu must have seemed a deliberate insult. When Cook returned on his
-third voyage, in 1777, several Tahitian tribes were in a state of war
-with Moorea, in which Tu took no active part. Cook then deliberately
-intervened in the support of the plan he had adopted of elevating Tu at
-the expense of the other chiefs. In his estimation, Tu was king by
-divine right, and any attack on his authority was treason in the first
-place, and an attack on British influence in the next. British influence
-and British threats made a radical change in the government of Tahiti,
-in opposition to the expressed wish of the great majority of the people.
-England wanted to control the political affairs of the island for
-commercial gain, and to extend her sovereignty in the South Seas, which
-only confirms that
-
- All government—indeed, every human benefit and enjoyment, every virtue
- and every prudent act—is founded on compromise and barter.
-
- BURKE.
-
-
-
-After Cook's departure, nearly eleven years elapsed before another
-European ship called at Tahiti, and, during this time, Pomare paid
-dearly for the distinctions forced upon him by the foreigners. When
-Lieutenant Bligh arrived in the _Bounty_, in 1788, Tu told him that after
-five years from the time of Cook's last departure, the people of the
-island Moorea (Eirrieo) joined with those of Attahura and made an attack
-on his district, and many of his subjects were killed, while he had
-himself fled, with the survivors, to the mountains. All the houses and
-property had been destroyed or carried away by the enemy. Bligh landed
-at Matavai in the _Bounty_ October 26, 1788. He came for a supply of
-breadfruit, which was to be introduced and domesticated in the various
-tropical colonies of Great Britain, and indirectly to advance the
-interests and power of Tu, who had nearly lost his influence over the
-natives. His position was so desperate that he begged the lieutenant to
-take him and his wife, Tetua, to England. He had a son, at this time six
-years old, who became the first Christian king of Tahiti. Before leaving
-the island, April 3, 1789, Bligh did what he could to strengthen Tu's
-position, and supplied him with firearms. For this act he gave the
-following explanation:
-
- He (Tu) had frequently expressed a wish that I would leave some
- firearms and ammunition with him, as he expected to be attacked after
- the ship sailed, and perhaps chiefly on account of our partiality to
- him. I therefore thought it but reasonable to accede to his request. I
- was the more readily prevailed on, as he said his intentions were to
- act only on the defensive. This, indeed, seems most suited to his
- disposition, which is neither active nor enterprising. When I proposed
- to leave with him a pair of pistols, which they prefer to muskets,
- they told me that his wife, Tetua, would fight with one and Oedidee
- with the other. Tetua has learned to load and fire a musket with great
- dexterity, and Oedidee is an excellent marksman. It is not common for
- women in this country to go to war, but Tetua is a very resolute
- woman, of a large make, and has great bodily strength.
-
-History shows that Tetua was not the only fighting woman in Tahiti, as
-at different times, in tribal wars, it was not uncommon for women to
-take an active part, and in more than one instance the leading part.
-
- On great occasions it is almost always women who have given the
- strongest proofs of virtue and devotion; the reason is, that with men,
- good and bad qualities are in general the result of calculation,
- whilst in women they are impulses, springing from the heart.
-
- COUNT MONTHOLON.
-
-Lieutenant Bligh left the island April 4th. As he was passing the
-Friendly, or Tonga group, April 28th, the larger part of his officers
-and men mutinied and set him and some eighteen others adrift in the
-ship's launch. The mutineers then put the ship about and returned to
-Tahiti, where they arrived at Matavai Bay, June 6, 1789. There they took
-in all the live-stock they could obtain, and twenty-four Tahitians, and
-sailed again June 16th for Tubuai, but appeared once more, September
-22nd, and landed sixteen of the mutineers, who were tired of their
-adventures. The rest sailed suddenly the next night, and vanished from
-the sight of men for twenty years. The sixteen mutineers who remained
-scattered more or less over the island, but made Pare their headquarters
-and Tu their patron. Here they set to work, November 12, 1789, to build
-a thirty-foot schooner, with which to make their escape. The effect of
-the example of these ruffians and criminals on the morals of the simple,
-receptive Tahitians can be readily imagined. These men, who had enjoyed
-the confidence of their commander and the advantages and pleasures of a
-trip to foreign strange countries, proved ungrateful, and "the earth
-produces nothing worse than an ungrateful man" (Ansonius). The schooner
-was launched August 5, 1790. The war which immediately followed, and
-which reestablished Tu in his power for the time, deserves to be called
-the War of the Mutineers of the _Bounty_. When Tu died, thirteen years
-later, the missionaries in their Journal recorded many details about his
-life and character, and among other things, they said:
-
- He was born in the district of Oparre, where his corpse now is, and
- was by birth chief of that district, and none other. The notice of the
- English navigators laid the foundation for his future aggrandizement;
- and the runaway seamen that from time to time quitted their vessels to
- sojourn in the island (especially that of His Majesty's ship _Bounty_'s
- crew, which resided here) were the instruments for gaining to Pomarre
- a greater extent of dominion and power than any other man had before
- in Otaheite.
-
-It is very evident that the first Pomare was a man without firmness and
-that what influence he exercised was due to the energies and ambition of
-his wife and to foreign support. When Lieutenant Bligh reached home and
-reported the mutiny, the British government sent the frigate _Pandora_ in
-search of the _Bounty_ and the deserted crew. The _Pandora_ never found the
-_Bounty_, which long since had been burned by the mutineers at Pitcairn
-Island; but she did find such of the mutineers as had returned to
-Tahiti, and who were actively engaged in establishing Tu as a Tahitian
-despot, when the _Pandora_, in March, 1791, appeared in Matavai Bay. The
-mutineers, it seems, unable to keep at sea in the rickety schooner,
-landed at Papara, March 26th, and took refuge in the mountains. Captain
-Edwards, of the _Pandora_, immediately sent two boats, with a number of
-men, to Papara. Through the friendly office of the chiefs and natives,
-the mutineers were finally captured, one by one, until only six remained
-out, and these were at last found near the seashore, where they were
-captured after many fruitless attempts. The _Pandora_ sailed from Tahiti
-with her prisoners in May, 1791, and in December following, Vancouver
-arrived in the sloop of war _Discovery_, on a search for a northwest
-passage to the Orient, stopping for supplies at Tahiti, December 28th.
-
-
-
-Vancouver, who had been with Cook in 1777, inquired for his old friends.
-He learned that the young king had taken the name of Otoo, and his old
-friend that of Pomare, having given up his name with his sovereign
-jurisdiction, though he still seemed to retain his authority as regent.
-This is the first record of the name Pomare, by which the family has
-since been known. After the birth of the young Tu, about 1782, the first
-of his children who was allowed to live, the father seems to have taken
-the name of Tuiah, or Tarino, which he bore in 1788. He took the name of
-Pomare (night cough) from his younger son, Terii nava horoo, a young
-child in 1791, who coughed at night. With the assistance of English
-guns, Pomare waged active war on neighboring chiefs, and the chief of
-Papara was the last one to succumb. By successive vigorous strokes, he
-finally gained control of the entire group of islands, including
-Borabora.
-
-MISSIONARY RULE
-
- It is better that men should be governed by priestcraft than violence.
-
- LORD MACAULEY.
-
-The early missionaries of Tahiti played an important role in the island
-politics. They did not limit their work to the conversion of the heathen
-islanders, but took an active part in political affairs, and many of
-their doings in that direction were not in accord with the teachings of
-the gospel. The first missionaries sent to Tahiti from England reached
-the island in the _Duff_, March, 1797. They received information of the
-island politics from two Swedish sailors, Andrew Lind, of the ship
-_Matilda_, which had been wrecked in the South Sea in 1792, and Peter
-Haggerstein, who deserted from the _Daedalus_ in February, 1793. Both of
-these men were adventurers of the type that has infested the South Seas
-for more than a century. They became well-known characters in the
-history of the island, sometimes assisting the missionaries, and
-sometimes annoying them. In July, 1797, Peter accompanied one of the
-missionaries as a guide and interpreter, on a circuit round the island,
-to make a sort of census, as a starting-point for the missionary work.
-They began with Papenoo, July 11th, and as they walked, Peter boasted of
-his exploits. His stories were so much in conflict with facts that they
-rather misled than aided the missionaries in search of island affairs.
-Temarii, the chief of Papara, had visited the missionaries at Matavai.
-The missionaries gave the following account of him:
-
- May 7, 1797, visited by the chief priest from Papara, Temarre. He was
- dressed in a wrapper of Otaheitian cloth, and over it an officer's
- coat doubled around him. At his first approach he appeared timid, and
- was invited in. He was just about seated when the cuckoo clock struck
- and filled him with astonishment and terror. Old Pyetea had brought
- the bird some breadfruit, observing it must be starved if we never fed
- it. At breakfast we invited Temarii to our repast, but he first held
- out his hand with a bit of plantain and looked very solemn, which, one
- of the natives said, was an offering to Eatooa (Tahitian divinity) and
- we must receive it. When we had taken it out of his hand and laid it
- under the table, he sat down and made a hearty breakfast. Brother
- Cover read the translated address to all these respected guests, the
- natives listening with attention, and particularly the priest, who
- seemed to drink in every word, but appeared displeased when urged to
- cast away their false gods, and on hearing the names of Jehovah and
- Jesus he would turn and whisper. Two days afterwards, Temarii came
- again to the mission house and this time with the young Otoo, Pomare
- H., and his first wife Tetuanui.
-
-Here again is the account of the visit by the missionaries:
-
- May 9th, Temarre accompanied the king and queen and staid to dine with
- us. He is, we find, of the royal race and son of the famed Oberea. He
- is the first chief of the island after Pomarre, by whom he has been
- subdued, and now lives in friendship with him and has adopted his son.
- He is also high in esteem as a priest.
-
-In July of the same year the missionaries visited Temarii at Papara on
-their way around the island. They found the chief under the influence of
-Kava, but were feasted the next day on Temarii's feast pig. Not only was
-Temarii the most powerful chief of the island, but Pomare had become, by
-his son's accession, a chief of the second order. He depended greatly on
-the favor of his son, the young Tu, who was, in 1797, supposed to be at
-least fifteen and perhaps seventeen years of age, and who had been
-adopted by Temarii, his cousin, who was about ten years older than he.
-Adoption was rather stronger in the South Seas than the tie of natural
-parentage. Between his natural father, Pomare, and his adopted father,
-Temarii, the young Tu preferred the latter, and sooner or later every
-one knew that Temarii would help Tu to emancipate himself and drive
-Pomare from the island.
-
-
-
-The _Duff_ sailed for England August 14, 1797, leaving the missionaries to
-the mercies of rival factions, and they soon ascertained that Pomare and
-Tu were on anything but friendly terms. The missionaries had faith in
-Pomare, who chose one of them by the name of Cover as a brother. Temarii
-chose another by the name of Main. These two missionaries went to Papara
-August 15th, at the suggestion of the influential native priest, Manne
-Manne, to remonstrate against a human sacrifice which was to be made at
-the Marae Tooarai. On account of a murder recently committed, the
-missionaries found the chief and people greatly excited, and fled as
-quickly as possible.
-
-In the month of March the missionaries found themselves in a critical
-condition when the ship _Nautilus_ appeared and two of her crew deserted.
-The deserters went to Pare and were sheltered there. The captain of the
-_Nautilus_ at once set to work to recover them. Four of the missionaries
-proceeded to Pare to see Tu, Pomare and Temarii and informed them that a
-refusal to return the men would be regarded as exhibiting an evil
-intention against the missionaries. They found Tu and Temarii at Pare,
-but went to get Pomare to join them, when they were suddenly attacked
-and stripped by some thirty natives, who took their clothes and treated
-them rather roughly, but at last released them. They went to Pomare's
-house and were kindly received. Pomare returned with them to Tu, and
-insisted on the punishment of the offenders and the delivery of the
-deserters. Two were executed, and the district of Pare took up arms to
-avenge them. Tu joined his father and suppressed the riot, so that the
-missionaries' clothes cost the natives fifteen lives before order was
-restored. This incident made the missionaries very unpopular and they
-had to depend more than ever on Pomare for protection.
-
-On August 24th, two whaling vessels, the _Cornwall_ and _Sally_, of London,
-anchored in Matavai Bay, and most of the principal chiefs went on board.
-On the 30th, while the missionaries were at dinner, Pomare came in great
-haste, and told them that a man had been blown up with gunpowder at the
-Council house in Pare, and requested them to hasten to the place and
-render assistance. When they arrived they found that the injured man was
-Temarii. Here is the account of the affair by the missionaries:
-
- At our arrival we were led to the bed of Temaree called also Orepiah,
- and beheld such a spectacle as we had never before seen. Brother
- Broomhall began immediately to apply what he had prepared with a
- camel's-hair brush over most parts of the body. He was apparently more
- passive under the operation than we could conceive a man in his
- situation would be capable of. The night drawing on, we took leave of
- him by saying we would return next morning with a fresh preparation.
- On the following morning we were struck with much surprise at the
- appearance of the patient He was literally daubed with something like
- a thick white paste. Upon inquiry we found it to be the scrapings of
- yams. Both the chief and his wife seemed highly offended at Brother
- Broomhall's application the preceding evening, and they would not
- permit him to do anything more for him, as he had felt so much pain
- from what he had applied. It was said that there was a curse put into
- the medicine by our God.
-
-It must be remembered that the Tahitian chiefs were also priests and not
-infrequently acted as physicians. The dissatisfaction of Temarii with
-the treatment of his case by the missionaries had therefore to be
-considered as a most unfortunate affair. Under these conditions the
-missionaries were apprehensive of increasing hostilities. The suspicion
-on part of the superstitious natives that the missionaries had been sent
-by Pomare to curse Temarii and cause his death was not only a natural
-but a reasonable one to the chief as well as his subjects. Pomare was
-quite capable of such conduct and as far as the natives knew, the
-missionaries were Pomare's friends and supporters. The accident which
-gave rise to this unfortunate occurrence was due to the English
-gunpowder and it was fortunate that the missionaries had nothing to do
-with furnishing it. The explosion occurred while Temarii was testing the
-quality of powder which he obtained from the whalers _Cornwall_ and _Sally_.
-
- A pistol was loaded and unthinkingly fired in the midst of a number of
- people, over the whole quantity (five pounds) of powder received. A
- spark of fire dropped from the pistol upon the powder that lay on the
- ground, and in a moment it blew up. The natives did not feel
- themselves hurt at first, but when the smoke was somewhat dispersed,
- observing their skin fouled with powder, they began to rub their arms,
- and found the skin peeling off under their fingers. Terrified at this,
- they instantly ran to a river near at hand and plunged themselves in.
-
-Temarii lingered in great suffering till September 8th, but the
-missionaries did not dare to visit him again for fear of violence on the
-part of the indignant natives. The whole body of chiefs was present and
-looked on in consternation while Temarii died. The chief's remains were
-carried, in the usual state, round the island to all his districts and
-duly mourned; and in the regular course prescribed by the island
-ceremonial, his head was secretly hidden in the cave at Papara. These
-demonstrations served to spread the news of the calamity, for which the
-missionaries received the exclusive blame. The political complications
-which followed induced Pomare to seek safety in flight to the Paumotu
-Islands, leaving his wife to face the storm. The chiefess was not idle
-after her husband's cowardly flight. On the 29th of November she
-compromised with Tu by ceding to him the authority he wanted, and
-obtained from him a pledge assuring her safety. This guaranty was the
-life of the high priest, old Manne Manne, Tu's best friend. He was
-murdered by Tetuanui's people on his way from Matavai to Pare. The
-chiefess was in the missionaries' house when this news arrived. She had
-a cartridge-box around her waist and a musket near at hand. She shook
-hands in a friendly manner with the Swede, saying unto him, "It is all
-over," meaning the war, and immediately returned to her home. Pomare
-gained nothing by these dissensions, for he had nothing to gain, but had
-to sacrifice a part of his possessions. The only winner in this tragic
-game was the worst and most bloodthirsty of all, Tu, the first Christian
-king. It must be remarked that this king was the creation of the
-English, and that he was used as a tool in the hands of the
-missionaries. The Europeans came, and not only upset all the moral ideas
-of the natives, but also their whole political system. Before European
-influence made itself felt in Tahiti, whenever a chief became
-intolerably arrogant or dangerous, the other chiefs united to overthrow
-him. All the wars that are remembered in island traditions were caused
-by the overweening pride, violence or abnormal ambition of the great
-chiefs of districts, and always ended in correcting existing evils and
-in restoring the balance of power.
-
-The English came just at the time when one of these revolutions was in
-progress. The whole island had united to punish the chiefess of Papara
-for outrageous disregard of the island courtesies which took the place
-of international law between great chiefs. Purea had taken away the
-symbol of sovereignty she had assumed for her son, and had given it for
-safe-keeping to the chief of Paea. The natives and chiefs had recognized
-the chief of Pare, Arue, as entitled to wear the Maro-ura, which Purea
-had denied him by insulting his wife. Then the chief of Paea had tried
-to imitate Purea and assert supreme authority, only to be in his turn
-defeated and killed.
-
-
-
-Probably Tu would never have attempted a similar course if the English
-had not insisted on recognizing and treating him as king of the whole
-island. He was one of the weakest of the chiefs and enjoyed little if
-any reputation as a military power. The other chiefs would have easily
-kept him in his proper place if the English had not constantly supported
-him and restored him to power when he was vanquished. English
-interference and the assistance of the missionaries prolonged his
-ambition and caused the constant revolutions which gave no chance for
-the people to recover from the losses. Pomare was a shrewd politician
-and with the assistance of English guns finally gained control over the
-whole island, crushing tribal rule, the safeguard of the people under
-his despotic rule. All visitors to the island became aware how
-desperately the unfortunate people struggled against the English policy
-of creating and supporting a tyranny. The brutality and violence of Tu
-made him equally hated by his own people of Pare and by the Teva
-districts. Of these facts the missionaries had full knowledge, as is
-evident from their numerous correspondents, nevertheless, they assisted
-him in carrying out his plans to gain control over the entire island.
-They supplied him freely with firearms and ammunition. To preserve peace
-the missionaries did some very curious things which suggest, as they
-hinted, that they were glad to see the natives fighting together, as is
-evident from one of their daily records:
-
- August 20, 1800.—We hear great preparations are making, whether for
- war or peace is to be determined in a short time, by some heathenish
- divination. If it should prove for war, those who are eager for blood
- seem determined to glut themselves, we rejoice that the Lord of Hosts
- is the God of the heathen as well as the Captain of the Armies of
- Israel; and while the potsherds of the earth are dashing themselves to
- pieces one against the other, they are fulfilling his determinate
- counsels and foreknowledge.
-
-In the month of June Pomare instituted a wholesale massacre to subject
-the entire island to his rule, and by brutal force gained the object of
-his ambition. In 1808 the political situation was such that the
-missionaries found it necessary for their safety to leave the island,
-and fled with Pomare, November 12th, to the island of Moorea. Pomare's
-cruelties and atrocities practiced upon the natives during his
-tyrannical rule are well described in a pen-picture drawn by Moerenhout:
-
- After having massacred all whom they had surprised (in Attahura),
- after having burned the houses, they went on to Papara, where Tati,
- who is still living (1837), was chief; but fortunately a man who had
- escaped from the carnage of Punaauia came to warn the inhabitants of
- Papara, so that they had time, not to unite in defense, but to fly.
- Nevertheless, in that infernal night and the day following a great
- number of persons perished, especially old men, women and children;
- and among the victims were the widow and children of Aripaia
- (Ariifaataia) Amo's son, who, surprised the next evening near
- Taiarahu, were pitilessly massacred with all their attendants. Tati
- and some of his warriors succeeded in reaching a fort called
- Papeharoro, at Mairepehe; but they were too few to maintain themseives
- there, and were forced to take refuge in the most inaccessible parts
- of the high mountains, from whence this chief succeeded in getting to
- a canoe which some of his faithful followers provided for him, and
- kept in readiness on the shore, at the peril of their lives. With him
- were his brother and his young son, whom he had himself carried in his
- arms during all this time of fatigue and dangers.
-
-Opuhara became chief of Papara, and soon afterward chief of the island,
-and remained the chief personage of Tahiti during the next seven years.
-Ellis, the historian of the missionaries, described him as an
-intelligent and interesting man.
-
-At Moorea, Pomare's friends were Paumotuans, Boraborans, Raiateans,
-missionaries, and outcasts. Even these at last abandoned him. The
-missionary journal shows that they had long regarded their work as a
-failure, and after identifying themselves with Pomare, in spite of
-emphatic warnings, no other result was possible. So the missionaries,
-leaving only Mr. Nott at Moorea, sailed for Australia, not daring to
-accept the proffered protection of the Tahiti chiefs, because they could
-not separate themselves, in the minds of the common people, from Pomare
-and his interests. At Moorea, Pomare urged the visiting chiefs to become
-Christians. On the 18th of July, 1812, he announced his own decision to
-the missionaries, and shortly afterwards, on invitation from his old
-district of Pare Arue, he returned to Tahiti, where he was permitted to
-remain for two years, as an avowed Christian, unmolested by his old
-enemies. He took up his residence at Pare Arue as a Christian chief,
-August 13, 1812, and kept up a correspondence with the missionaries at
-Moorea.
-
-The missionaries returned and were more successful in Christianizing the
-people. On the 17th of February, 1813, Pomare wrote: "Matavai has been
-delivered up to me. When I am perfectly assured of the sincerity of this
-surrender I will write to you another letter." The missionaries made a
-tour of the island; many conversions took place; in Moorea several idols
-were publicly burned; there could be no doubt that the Christians were
-pursuing an active course, and that their success would bring back the
-authority of Pomare over the whole island; but neither Opuhara nor Tati
-interfered, and the peace remained. Yet, after waiting two years at
-Pare, vainly expecting the restoration of his government, and
-endeavoring to recover his authority in his hereditary districts, Pomare
-returned to Moorea in the autumn of 1814, accompanied by a large train
-of adherents and dependents, all professing Christianity. At the same
-time the Christian converts in Tahiti became an organization known as
-the Bure Atua, and every one could see that Pomare was making use of
-them, and of his wife's resources, to begin a new effort to recover by
-force his authority in the island. War was inevitable, and Pomare, with
-his Christian followers and missionaries, could choose the time and
-place.
-
-Pomare himself was not a soldier, nor had he anything of a soldierly
-spirit. He left active campaigning to his wives, who were less likely to
-rouse the old enmity. His two wives, Terite and Pomare vehine, came over
-to Pare Arue May, 1815, with a large party of Christians, and urged
-their plans for the overthrow of the native chiefs. The chiefs had no
-other alternative than to get rid of them, and fixed the night of July
-7th for the combined attack. Opuhara led the forces, and it is said that
-he had given the two queens timely warning to effect their escape. For
-his delay some of the other chiefs charged him with treachery. He
-replied that he wished no harm to the two women or their people; that
-his enemies were the Parionuu; and he marched directly into Pare Arue,
-and subdued it once more.
-
-
-
-While Pomare and the missionaries grew stronger, and, as Ellis expressed
-it, "became convinced that the time was not very remote when their faith
-and principles must rise preeminent above the power and influence" of
-the native chiefs, the chiefs themselves exhibited vacillation. Pomare
-returned, with all his following, apparently armed and prepared for war.
-The native converts were trained to the use of firearms and the whole
-missionary interest became, for the moment, actively militant. The
-native chiefs remained passive. Under the appearance of religious
-services, Pomare and the missionaries kept their adherents under arms
-and prepared them for any hostilities that might arise.
-
-With his army numbering eight hundred, two war canoes, one manned with
-musketeers, the other with a swivel gun in the stern, commanded by a
-white man, Pomare, on November 11th, took possession at or near the
-village of Punaauia, near Papara, with pickets far in advance. Opuhara
-hastily summoned his men in the famous battle of Fei-pi (the ripe
-plantains). The field of battle was among the foothills near the coast.
-Opuhara's warriors made a valiant attack and pierced the front ranks of
-the enemy till it reached the spot where one of the queens, Pomare
-vehine, and the chief warriors stood. There one of the native converts
-leveled his gun at Opuhara, fired, the chief fell, and in a very short
-time expired. The leader of the native forces was killed by one of his
-own people who had cast his lot with Pomare and the missionaries.
-
-This war was brought on to force the natives to Pomare's rule, and not
-for the purpose of removing obstacles to the Christianization of the
-islanders, as the chiefs were not opposed to the peaceable dissemination
-of the teachings of the gospel. It was a political and not a religious
-war, and in this political endeavor the missionaries and their converts
-took the leading part. The missionaries evidently forgot the legitimate
-object of their mission and unmercifully slaughtered the natives who
-took up arms to defend their rights. The Christians on Pomare's side
-were fighting for supremacy, unmindful of the teachings of the sacred
-Scriptures.
-
- For he shall have judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy;
- and mercy rejoiceth against judgment St. James ii: 13.
-
-When Opuhara fell, his men lost courage, retreated, and were not
-pursued. The death of Opuhara was deeply regretted by Tati, his near
-relative and successor in the government of the district. In the ranks
-of his followers it was firmly believed Opuhara, few as his forces were,
-would have vanquished the enemy, had not the native missionaries been
-taught to shoot as they were taught to pray, and been supplied with guns
-along with Bibles. With the death of Opuhara the last hope of the
-natives was dissipated and submission to Pomare's rule became a stern
-reality. Neither the missionaries nor the natives had any idea of
-allowing Pomare to recede into his old ways. They made him refrain from
-massacre or revenge after the battle of Fei-pi. Tati, the chief of
-Papara, maintained peace from that time by his wise rule in that part of
-the island. He began by the usual island custom of binding Pomare to him
-by the strongest possible ties. The rapid extinction of chiefly families
-in Tahiti had left the head chief of Moorea heir to most of the
-distinguished names and properties in both islands. Marama, the head
-chief of Moorea, had only one heir, a daughter, a relative of Pomare.
-This great heiress, almost the last remnant of the three or four sacred
-families of the two islands, was given by Pomare in marriage to Tati's
-son, immediately after Tati himself was restored to his rights as head
-chief of the Tevas. In doing so he claimed for his own the first child
-that Marama (the bride) should have and made at the same time a compact
-that the children from the marriage should marry into the Pomare family.
-These conditions were made to render himself more influential with the
-most refractory of the conquered tribes. Pomare II. died December 7,
-1821, leaving a daughter, Aimata, and a son, Pomare III., a child in
-arms. Aimata was never regarded with favor by Pomare, her father, who
-was frank in saying that she was not his child; so the infant son was
-made heir to the throne. Moerenhout made the statement that Pomare, on
-his deathbed, expressed the wish that Tati should take the reins of the
-government in his hands, but that the missionaries and other chiefs were
-afraid to trust Tati, and preferred to take the charge of the infant
-king on themselves. The missionaries in due time went through the formal
-ceremony of crowning the infant, April 22, 1824, at Papara, and then
-took him to their school, the South Sea Academy, which was established
-in March, 1824, in the island of Moorea at Papetoai. There he was taught
-to read and write, and educated in English, which became his language,
-until he was seven years old, when he fell ill, and was taken over to
-his mother at Pare, where he died January 11, 1827. During the reign of
-the infant king, Mata, a friend of the family, managed the affairs of
-state and became the guardian of Aimata, as the Queen, Pomare IV., was
-always called by the natives. Aimata was married at the age of nine
-years. She led an unhappy life, domestic, political, private and public,
-until at last the missionaries, English and French, fought so violently
-for control of her and the island that she was actually driven away.
-
-Among other laws which were supposed to have been passed through the
-influence of the English missionaries, to prevent strangers from
-obtaining influence in the island, was one dated March 1, 1833,
-forbidding strangers, under any pretext, from marrying in Tahiti or
-Moorea. Ariitaimai, of noble birth, the historian of Tahiti, was not
-inclined to marry a native chief, a decision which met the approval of
-Marama, her mother. She finally consented to become the wife of Mr.
-Salmon, an Englishman, who was held in high esteem and consideration in
-the island; and Aimata suspended the law in order to enable her friend
-to be married to the man of her choice. The missionaries virtually ruled
-the island for forty years.
-
-WARS BETWEEN PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC MISSIONARIES
-
-In 1836 two French missionary priests landed at Tahiti to convert, not
-pagans, but Protestants to the Roman Catholic faith. The Protestant
-missionaries, who held the reins of the government, indignant at this
-interference, invoked the aid of the British consul, Pritchard, who
-caused the Queen to order their arrest and expulsion. The order was
-executed December 12, 1836. The two priests made a protest to their
-government, and King Louis Philippe sent a frigate to Papeete with the
-usual ultimatum, to which the Queen naturally acceded. Then began a
-struggle on the part of Consul Pritchard and the English missionaries to
-recover their ground, which led to a letter from Queen Pomare to Queen
-Victoria, suggesting a British protectorate, whereupon the French
-government sent another warship to Tahiti, in 1839, and made Aimata
-repeat her submission. As the British government at that time did not
-take much interest in missionaries, and Sir Robert Peel had a very
-precise knowledge of the value of unclaimed islands all over the world,
-Queen Victoria did not accept the proposition made by the Tahitian
-Queen, and the missionaries were again thrown on their own resources.
-
-
-
-The chiefs ignored the missionaries, and in September, 1841, decided
-that, between such powers as England and France, they could not hope to
-maintain independence or even a good understanding, and since England
-refused the proffered protectorate, they would turn to France. So they
-drew up the necessary papers for the Queen to approve, but a British war
-vessel arrived in that critical moment, and this reenforcement of
-British interests induced the vacillating Queen to refuse to sign them.
-The next August another French naval force arrived, and the chiefs again
-met in council, with the admiral's aid and advice. The chiefs sent the
-following letter to the French admiral, Du Petit—Tuhouars:
-
- Inasmuch as we can not continue to govern ourselves so as to live on
- good terms with foreign governments, and we are in danger of losing
- our island, our kingdom, and our liberty, we, the Queen and the high
- chiefs of Tahiti, write to ask the King of the French to take us under
- his protection.
-
-In response to this formal request the French admiral, on September 30,
-1842, hoisted the flag of the protectorate. This did not end the
-political and religious troubles of the little island. Consul Pritchard,
-who had been absent from his post for some time, returned from England
-February 23, 1843, and declared violent war against the French. As
-usual, Queen Pomare yielded to his wishes, and refused to obey those of
-the French admiral. The admiral lost his patience and temper, landed
-troops and took possession of the island, declared the Queen deposed,
-and, when disturbances arose, which he believed to be fomented and
-fostered by Pritchard, he arrested him and had him expelled from the
-island. This act excited much attention, both in the English and French
-press, which resulted in an order from the King of France to the admiral
-to restore the protectorate.
-
-It will be seen that the last wars of Tahiti were caused by a religious
-intolerance on the part of the English missionaries, who objected to the
-presence of two Roman Catholic priests in the island. European
-governments were appealed to and had to interfere in establishing in the
-island free religious thought. It was a fight between two religious
-denominations which kept the natives in a state of warfare, a most
-serious reflection on Christian charity,
-
- Alas for the rarity
-
- Of Christian charity
-
- Under the sun.
-
- HOOD.
-
-The constant unrest of the islanders caused by outside interference
-provoked frequent rebellions, for "general rebellions and revolts of an
-whole people never were encouraged, now or at any time; they are always
-provoked."
-
-The two priests, bent upon a humane mission, who, by their presence in
-Tahiti, without any fault of their own, incurred the enmity of the
-Protestant missionaries, were the direct cause of French intervention
-which resulted in the protectorate and later annexation of the island.
-The priests remained, new ones came, and today nearly one-half of the
-population of the island are members of the Roman Catholic church.
-
-The teachings and example of the English missionaries and their conduct
-toward the Catholic priests prove only too plainly:
-
- Christian graces and virtues they can not be, unless fed, invigorated
- and animated by universal charity.
-
- ATTERBURY.
-
-
-
-THE LAST WAR
-
- Our country sinks beneath the yoke;
-
- It weeps, it bleeds, and each new day a gash
-
- Is added to her wounds.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-The disturbances which preceded and followed the establishment of the
-French protectorate induced the Queen to seek safety on a British ship,
-and the whole Pomare following took up arms and established themselves
-in the stronghold of native power and influence near Papeete. Another
-civil war broke out which waged between the natives and Europeans from
-1844 to 1845. Tired of foreign dictation and oppression, the natives
-fought with desperation. Forts, which remain today in a good state of
-preservation, were erected by natives and the French. Most of the ruins
-of these forts are scattered along the ninety-mile drive between Papeete
-and Papara. From time to time, determined attacks were made with varying
-fortunes of war. The natives were superior in number but could not stand
-up against the well-directed firearms of the professional soldiers. A
-last and crushing attack was ordered by the French admiral, which meant
-certain defeat for the natives.
-
-It was at this critical time that a woman came to the rescue of her
-people and prevented a wholesale slaughter of the heroic defenders of
-the island. This woman was Ariitaimai, the authoress of the book we have
-been following so closely in sketching the history of the island. She
-was the daughter of the famous Marama, of Moorea, the wife of Mr.
-Salmon, and the mother of Tati Salmon, the present chief of Papara. She
-recognized the hopelessness of the cause of her people and determined to
-prevent further useless bloodshed and establish peace. It required good
-judgment and a great deal of courage to undertake the task which she
-finally accomplished with such a brilliant success. She was one of those
-who believed that
-
- Almost all difficulties may be got the better of by prudent thought,
- revolving and pondering much in the mind.
-
- MARCELLINUS.
-
-She was intensely patriotic and had no fear of the results of her daring
-mission. She was very popular with the natives and well known to the
-French authorities, which aided her very much in formulating and
-carrying out her plans. She had no time to lose, as the decisive attack
-on her countrymen had been ordered and was to take place the next day.
-She called on Bruaat, the governor of the island, with the determined
-intention to end the war. He granted her twenty-four hours to accomplish
-her task. She then called a meeting of the head chiefs and urged them to
-surrender on the conditions stipulated by the French, in view of the
-hopelessness of the island's cause. At that time this woman was the most
-conspicuous figure in the politics of the island, loved and respected by
-the chiefs and the people throughout Tahiti and Moorea. The head chiefs
-received her proposition with favor. Notable speeches complimentary to
-her were made on this occasion. One chief said:
-
- Ariitaimai, you have flown amongst us, as it were, like the two birds,
- Ruataa and Toena. Your object was to join together Urarii and Mauu,
- and you have brought them into this valley. You have brought the
- cooling medicines of _vainu_ and _mahainuieumu_ into the hearts of the
- chiefs that are collected here. Our hearts yearn for you, and we can
- not in words thank you; but the land, one and all, will prove to you
- in the future that your visit will always remain in their memory. You
- have come personally. I have heard you speak the words out of your own
- mouth. You have brought us the best of all goods, which is peace. You
- have done this when you thought we were in great trouble, and ran the
- risk of losing our lives and property; you have come forward as a
- peacemaker for us all.
-
-What beautiful thoughts in simple, homely language! What a splendid
-specimen of natural oratory!
-
- In oratory, affectation must be avoided; it being better for a man by
- a native and clear eloquence to express himself than by those words
- which may smell either of the lamp or ink-horn.
-
- LORD HERBERT OF CHERBURY.
-
-The chiefs unanimously accepted the terms of peace, and after the
-adjournment of the council, Ariitaimai hastened to Papeete with the
-message of the chiefs, which was accepted, and once more the
-protectorate flag was raised and was recognized and respected by the
-chiefs and the people. During all these great final trials of the
-island, the Queen remained in the island of Moorea and even after peace
-was restored and she was formally requested to return, she refused to do
-so. The French authorities offered the crown repeatedly to Ariitaimai,
-but as often, she refused the great honor. The exiled Queen was her
-intimate and dear friend and
-
- Ennuis has well remarked that "a real friend is known in adversity."
-
- CICERO.
-
-She was content with having accomplished a patriotic deed and with the
-respect, love and gratitude of her people.
-
- So true it is, that honor, prudently declined, often comes back with
- increased lustre.
-
- LIVIUS.
-
-She could say:
-
- Give me a staff of honour for mine age;
-
- But not a sceptre to control the world.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-and
-
- Tis less to conquer than to make wars cease,
-
- And, without fighting, awe the world to peace.
-
- HALIFAX.
-
-Ariitaimai made several visits to the unhappy Queen, urging her to
-return and resume her reign of the island, and had the satisfaction,
-finally, to bring her back from Raiatea on her third visit.
-
- True friends visit us in prosperity only when invited, but in
- adversity they come without invitation.
-
- THEOPHRASTUS.
-
-The Queen, on her return, was received with regal honors by the French
-authorities and by the people.
-
-Pomare V. was the last of the kings of Tahiti. He was the oldest son of
-Queen Pomare IV. and known as Ariiane Pomare. He was married to Marau
-Taawa Salmon, Tati Salmon's sister, and had two daughters:
-Teriimii-o-Tahiti, and Arii mainhinihi. Under European influences and
-customs he became a degenerate Tahitian, profligate and dissipated, and
-it is said that he was largely responsible for the annexation of the
-island to France as a colony in 1880, as he received a substantial
-remuneration for his influence in that direction and a pension of sixty
-thousand francs a year. He died in 1891. Since Tahiti has become a
-French possession the island has enjoyed uninterrupted peace. The French
-government has been exceedingly liberal with the natives, having
-interfered as little as possible with their habits and customs.
-
- That is the best government which desires to make the people happy,
- and knows how to make them happy.
-
- MACAULEY.
-
-The island is governed under the French laws, but local laws and tribal
-rule remain and administer the local affairs. In completing the eventful
-history of this little island it becomes apparent:
-
- What is public history but a register of the successes and
- disappointments, the vices, the follies and quarrels of those engaged
- in the contention for power.
-
- PALEY.
-
-The government has established and enforced religious liberty, observing
-the precept: "The protection of religion is indispensable to all
-government" (Bishop Warburton). Taxation is limited to road tax only.
-The annexation was looked upon with great disfavor by the natives, but
-was finally accepted with good grace, and peace and happiness have
-reigned since.
-
-THE NATIVES
-
-The Polynesians inhabiting the islands of the great Pacific Ocean
-constitute a distinct race of people, supposed at one time by certain
-writers to be of American origin, now almost universally admitted to
-have a close affinity with the Malays of the peninsula and Indian
-Archipelago, and hence classified by Dr. Latham under his subdivision
-_Oceanica Mongolidæ_. In physical structure and appearance the Polynesians
-in general more nearly resemble the Malays than they do any other race,
-although differing from them in some respects, as, indeed, the natives
-of several of the groups also do from each other. Centuries and
-environment have left their impress on the inhabitants of the different
-islands, as
-
- Everything that is created is changed by the laws of man; the earth
- does not know itself in the revolution of years; even the races of man
- assume various forms in the course of years.
-
- MANILIUS.
-
-
-
-In stature the Tahitian compares well with any other race. The face is
-expressive of more than ordinary intelligence. The color of the skin
-varies from almost black to a light yellow. The aquiline nose is
-commonly seen among them, and there are many varieties of hair and
-complexion. In complexion they resemble more nearly the Japanese than
-the Chinese. The beard is thin, the prevailing hair jet black, straight,
-wavy or curly, profuse and long; eyes large and black; no drooping or
-obliquity of eyelids. The face is generally roundish; lower jaw well
-developed; no unusual malar prominences; forehead slightly receding;
-mouth large, lips thick and as a rule slightly everted; wide nostrils;
-ears large; chin prominent. The general resemblance of stature and
-physiognomy, however, is more with the Malays than any other race, and
-from which they are undoubtedly the descendants, changed by climatic
-influences, food, habits and methods of living. In physical appearance
-the Tahitians and Samoans are the handsomest and tallest of all the
-natives of the Pacific Islands, with the exception, perhaps, of the
-Maoris, or New Zealanders.
-
-The superstition of the taboo, the use of kava as an intoxicating drink,
-cannibalism, infanticide, offering of human sacrifices, tattooing, and
-circumcision, which were formerly prevalent in Tahiti, have disappeared
-under the influence of Christianity.
-
-Much has been said about the beauty of some of the women of the South
-Sea Islands, but I am sure I do them no injustice if I say that these
-descriptions are overdrawn by sentimental writers and do not correspond,
-when put to the test of comparison, with the reality. When young, there
-is something fascinating about the women, imparted by the luxurious
-jet-black hair, the large black eyes as they gaze at the strangers
-
- With a smile that is childlike and bland.
-
- FRANCIS BRET HARTE.
-
-Beauty and youth among the Tahitian women are of short duration, and in
-most of them advanced age brings an undesirable degree of corpulence.
-
-Cook visited these people when they were in their original physical and
-moral state. He praises their openness and generosity. "Neither does
-care ever seem to wrinkle their brow. On the contrary, even the approach
-of death does not appear to alter their usual vivacity. I have seen
-them, when brought to the brink of the grave by disease, and when
-preparing to go to battle; but in neither case, never observed their
-countenance overclouded with melancholy, or serious reflection. Such a
-disposition leads them to direct all their aims only to what can give
-them pleasure and ease."
-
- The whole countenance is a certain silent language of the mind.
-
- CICERO.
-
-These mental traits have been preserved up to the present time.
-Melancholy and suicide are almost unknown in Tahiti. The people are
-happy, contented and free from care and anxiety and
-
- Enjoy the pleasures of the passing hour, and bid adieu for a time to
- grave pursuits.
-
- HORATIUS.
-
-They seem to know that
-
- Care and the desire for more
-
- Attend the still increasing store.
-
- HORATIUS.
-
-Desire for great wealth does not exist among the natives. Nature has
-supplied them with nearly all they need, hence little remains for them
-to do to meet their modest desires.
-
-Religion has not done away entirely with superstition, and has improved
-their morals little, if any. Old European residents of Papeete agree
-that the morality of the natives has not improved since they have been
-under the influence of civilization, forced on them by the European
-invaders. The greatest fault of the people is their incurable laziness,
-a vice for which they are not entirely responsible, as Nature has
-provided so bountifully for their needs. Robbery, stealing and murder
-are almost unknown; petty thefts, on the contrary, are quite common. The
-people, young and old, are affable, extremely courteous and hospitable
-to a fault; the family ties strong, and extending to the remotest
-relatives.
-
- Man is a social animal, and born to live together so as to regard the
- world as one house.
-
- SENECA.
-
-Nowhere in the world are the people more sociable than in Tahiti. This
-sociability was perhaps more pronounced before the island was discovered
-than it is now, but it remains to this day as one of the prominent
-characteristics of the Polynesian race. Respect and love for parents,
-strong attachments to relatives and friends, are striking virtues of the
-Tahitians. They love social intercourse and have the highest regard for
-friendship. Poverty and misfortunes do not intercept friendships, on the
-contrary they cement them more firmly.
-
- The firmest friendships have been formed in mutual adversity; as iron
- is most strongly united by the fiercest flames.
-
- COLTON.
-
-Before European influence had made itself felt in the island, each tribe
-constituted a large family, and property lines were not sharply defined.
-As long as there was anything to eat, no one was left hungry. The
-Tahitians are extremely fond of mingling with their relatives, friends,
-members of the same and other tribes. They appreciate to the fullest
-extent that "we have been born to unite with fellow-men, and to join in
-community with the human race" (Cicero). They treat old age with
-reverence and respect, and take the very best care of the sick and poor.
-
- Unity of feelings and affections is the strongest relationship.
-
- PUBLIUS SYRUS.
-
-
-
-Under the teachings of the missionaries, Protestant and Catholic,
-paganism has disappeared from the island. All are church-members and
-attend service regularly. The denominations represented are the
-Episcopalians, Catholics and Latter-day Saints in above numerical order.
-Most of the priests and preachers are natives. Christianity, has,
-however, failed to suppress immorality and do away entirely with the
-inborn superstition of the natives. The former evil is firmly rooted,
-the latter difficult of complete eradication.
-
- Nothing has more power over the multitude than superstition: in other
- respects powerless, ferocious, fickle, when it is once captivated by
- superstitious notions, it obeys its priests better than its leaders.
-
- QUINTUS CURTIUS RUFUS.
-
-Wicked habits are productive of vice, and vice follows long-standing
-habits. The Tahitians are by nature kind, affectionate, and their
-opinions are easily moulded for good or bad, but many of their customs
-and habits cling to them in spite of civilization and Christianization,
-for "how many unjust and wicked things are done from mere habit!"
-(Terentius); and "so much power has custom over tender minds"
-(Virgilius).
-
-The children of Tahiti are given excellent opportunities for obtaining a
-good elementary education. In all of the larger villages there is a
-government school, usually two churches. Catholic and Protestant, and
-their respective parochial schools. The natives love their language and
-are averse to the French, hence, as a rule, the parochial are better
-patronized than the government schools. The literature in the Tahitian
-language is limited to translations of the Bible, catechisms, religious
-song books and a few school books. Children of the better classes who
-seek a higher education, go abroad, in preference to the United States.
-Few show any ambition to enter any of the professions with the exception
-of the clerical. The mass of the people are content in leading an easy,
-dreamy life, showing no disposition either to acquire wealth or fame.
-Agriculture, manufacture and commerce have no attraction for them. They
-are children from the cradle to the grave, have the desires of children,
-and are pleased with what pleases children. Their tastes are simple,
-their desires few, and instead of in care and worry, they live through
-their span of life in peace of mind and contentment.
-
- But if men would live according to reason's rules, they would find the
- greatest riches to live content with little, for there is never want
- where the mind is satisfied.
-
- LUCRETIUS.
-
-In contrast to the Westerner, the favored Tahitian can say:
-
- I have everything, yet have nothing; and although I possess nothing,
- still of nothing am I in want.
-
- TERRENCE.
-
-The natives are temperate in drinking, and frugal in eating. Fish and
-fruit are their principal articles of diet. Their habits in this
-direction have not undergone much change since Captain Cook wrote:
-
- Their common diet is made up of at least nine-tenths vegetable food;
- and, I believe, more particularly, the _mahee_, or fermented breadfruit,
- which enters almost every meal, has a remarkable effect upon them,
- preventing a costive habit, and producing a very sensible coolness
- about them, which could not be perceived in us who fed on animal food.
- And it is, perhaps, owing to this temperate course of life that they
- have so few diseases among them.
-
-Smoking is indulged in only to a moderate extent, cigarettes and pipe
-being the favorite methods of consuming the weed.
-
-Art has never had a place in the minds of the Tahitians. All attempts in
-this direction in design, carving and sculpture, are rude. Like all
-primitive peoples, they are fond of music. Their voices are sweet, but
-the airs of their music are monotonous. The primitive drum, and a little
-crude instrument made of bamboo, something like a flute, placed in one
-of the nostrils when played, are the instruments in most common use. The
-national dance, formerly the principal amusement of the people, is
-discouraged by the government, but is allowed once a year as a special
-favor to the natives.
-
-FOREIGNERS IN TAHITI
-
-Most of the foreigners who remain permanently in Tahiti become attached
-to the island by marriage, the strongest possible incentive to make it
-their permanent home. Many of these men are adventurers. Some of them
-have honest intentions to make this beautiful island their permanent
-home. Far away from their place of birth and relatives, charmed by the
-beauties of the island, they conclude:
-
- I will take some savage woman; she shall rear my dusky race.
-
- TENNYSON.
-
-In many instances such unions have resulted very happily. On the voyage
-from San Francisco to Tahiti, I met Mr. George R. Richardson, a native
-of Springfield, Mass., who had lived for the last thirty years, with his
-native wife on the little atoll island, Kaukuaia of the Tuamotu group,
-one hundred and sixty-eight miles from Tahiti. He was suffering from
-carcinoma of the esophagus, and was returning from San Francisco,
-whither he had gone for medical advice. His parents were still living,
-but he had no desire to visit the place of his birth, so fully had he
-become acclimated to the climatic and native conditions of the Society
-Islands. He was then fifty-five years of age. He left the United States
-March 4, 1874, on a sailing vessel, and six months later landed at
-Tahxa. In six months he had obtained a fair knowledge of the native
-language, and married in Kaukuaia a woman who could not speak a word of
-English. This union resulted in sixteen children, three of whom died,
-six girls and seven boys living at the present time, and of these, three
-girls and two boys are married. Through his wife he inherited from her
-mother five acres of land with three thousand cocoanut-palms. To this
-land he obtained a legal ownership eight years ago by virtue of a law of
-legal registration passed by the government. The island on which he
-lives contains only one hundred and fifty inhabitants and the only
-income is obtained from copra and mother-of-pearl.
-
-
-
-The inhabitants of this island are Catholics and Mormons. A Catholic
-priest comes once a month to minister to the spiritual needs of the
-adherents to the faith of his church. The services of both denominations
-are conducted in the native language. He and a Frenchman are the only
-white inhabitants of the island.
-
-On February 16, 1878, a great storm overflooded the island and our
-American, who spent a whole night in the crown of a cocoanut tree, lost
-everything. Only five thousand cocoanut trees were left on the whole
-island. A man-of-war came from Tahiti three days later and ministered to
-the urgent needs of the survivors.
-
-The inhabitants of this little island suffer frequently from malaria and
-grippe. The latter disease returns regularly almost every year. Of the
-remaining diseases, diarrhea and dysentery are the most common.
-Tuberculosis is prevalent and claims many victims. This island has now a
-population of one hundred and fifty, and during his residence he has
-never seen a physician, although the inhabitants were frequently in need
-of medical services. He was obliged to render his wife assistance at the
-birth of all of his children, and strangely, each time without any
-mishap, either to mother or child. What happened on that island must
-have happened on the many other distant islands under similar
-circumstances. Here, like elsewhere, in the South Sea Islands, are
-medicine-men who attend to tooth-pulling, and, when any cutting is to be
-done, a scalpel is made of a piece of glass. In case of sickness they
-make use of roots and herbs of their own gathering.
-
-BUSINESS IN TAHITI
-
-The Tahitian is not a business man. What little business is transacted
-in the island is done by foreigners. The larger stores in Papeete are
-owned and managed by French, Germans and Americans. The smaller stores
-in the city, and nearly all small shops in the villages, are in the
-hands of Chinamen.
-
-The fertile soil of Tahiti is not made use of to any considerable
-extent. The sugar industry has been tried but has been entirely
-abandoned, owing to high wages for labor and exorbitant freight rates.
-The principal articles of export are copra, cocoanuts, vanilla-beans and
-mother-of-pearl shells. Copra (dried meat of cocoanut), brings three
-cents a kilo and cocoanuts are sold at a cent apiece. The raising of
-vanilla-beans was a paying industry five years ago, when they commanded
-a price of seventeen dollars a pound, and were then eagerly sought for
-in the market, as they were considered superior in flavor to those of
-any other country. The Chinamen have ruined this source of income as
-well as the reputation of the product. These shrewd business men control
-the local market completely and go from place to place long before
-harvest-time, buy the whole crop for the year for cash, and have the
-beans picked before they are ripe and mature them artificially. The
-result of such dishonest transactions has been that, owing to the poor
-quality of the beans thus treated, the price of the article has been
-reduced to three or four dollars per pound.
-
-The vanilla-bean grows best in the shady forests, and requires but
-little attention except artificial fertilization of the flowers and
-picking of the beans. In the West Indies the numerous insects fertilize
-the monogamous flowers; in this island, this has to be done largely by
-artificial fecundation. Women and children do this work. With a sharp
-little stick, the pollen is taken from the anthers and rubbed over the
-stigma of the pistil. A child who is active can fertilize fifteen
-hundred flowers a day. It is a great pity that this industry has been
-cheapened by the avaricious Chinamen, as it is an industry that requires
-very little labor and should be remunerative, as the soil and climate
-are peculiarly well adapted for the cultivation of this valuable
-aromatic.
-
-Most of the fruit which grows in Tahiti is too perishable for
-transportation and is consequently very cheap. The largest and most
-luscious pineapples can be bought for three cents apiece, oranges
-one-fourth of a cent. Alligator pears, the finest fruit grown anywhere,
-are sold at the market for two and three cents apiece. At the time of my
-visit, eggs were sold at forty cents a dozen. Meat, with the exception
-of pork, is imported from New Zealand and the United States. Most of the
-native families raise hogs, and this animal is found also in a wild
-state in the jungles of the forests.
-
-The wages, for this island, are rather high. An ordinary laborer is paid
-seventy-five cents a day, and the women who are willing to work can earn
-fifty cents a day. The average Tahitian works only long enough to
-procure the necessities of life, and, as these are few, it is difficult
-to find men and women for ordinary labor and housework.
-
-The fact that there is no bank in the whole island shows that the amount
-of money which circulates among the people is very small. Some
-enterprising American attempted to establish a telephone line encircling
-the island, but lack of patronage soon paralyzed the undertaking. The
-island is a place for a dreamy, easy existence, and not for business.
-
-The communication with the outside world is carried on by two regular
-steamer lines, one from San Francisco, the other from Auckland, but both
-of these lines are supported by liberal government subsidies to make
-them remunerative, as the passenger traffic and the exports and imports
-of the island would not suffice to make them independent of government
-aid.
-
-OLD TAHITI
-
- What will not length of time be able to change?
-
- CLAUDIANUS.
-
-Tahiti is exceedingly interesting to-day, but how much more so must it
-have been to Captain Wallis and his crew, who first set their eyes on
-this gem of the Pacific! When the _Dolphin_ came in sight of this
-beautiful island that never before had been seen by a white man, we can
-readily imagine officers and crew straining their eyes to see first its
-rugged outlines, and later the details of the wonderful landscapes.
-Under the blue sky and lighted up by the vigorous rays of the tropic
-sun, they could see the mountain-peaks clothed in the verdure of a
-tropic forest, the little island set like a gem in the ocean, and, as
-they beheld these mountains and turned their eyes upward they could also
-see
-
- They were canopied by the blue sky, so cloudless, clear, and purely
- beautiful that God alone was to be seen in heaven.
-
- BYRON.
-
-
-
-As they approached nearer and saw the natural wealth of the island and
-its happy inhabitants basking in the sunshine, eating what Nature had
-provided for them without care or toil on their part, they must have
-come to the unavoidable conclusion that they at last had found a land
-where
-
- There was a never-ending spring, and flowers unsown were kissed by the
- warm western breeze. Then the unploughed land gave forth corn, and the
- ground, year after year, was white with full ears of grain. Rivers of
- milk, rivers of nectar ran, and the yellow honey continued to pour
- from the ever-green oak.
-
- OVIDIUS.
-
-On landing, having overcome the animosity of the natives and ascertained
-the boundless resources of the island, they could not escape the
-conviction that they in their wanderings over the limitless sea, had at
-last found "a heaven on earth" (Milton).
-
-What wonderful stories those men must have brought to Europe on their
-return after the long and hazardous voyage, when they related what they
-had seen in Tahiti, then in its primitive native state! Captain Cook
-made a longer stay in the island on his first visit and had therefore a
-better opportunity to study the island, its resources and its
-interesting inhabitants. It is on his descriptions we will rely in
-giving an account of some of the traits, customs and habits of the
-people as they existed at that time.
-
-RELIGION OF THE NATIVES
-
- Every one is, in a small degree, the image of God.
-
- MANLIUS.
-
-The most primitive of all races have some conception of a divinity and a
-life hereafter, for
-
- A god has his abode within our breast; when he rouses us, the glow of
- inspiration warms us; this holy rapture springs from the seeds of the
- divine mind sown in man.
-
- OVIDIUS.
-
-Let us listen to Captain Cook concerning the religion of the Tahitians
-before they knew the name of God and the story of the Saviour while on
-earth:
-
- The common people have only a very vague idea of the religious
- sentiments of the race, but the priests, who are quite numerous, have
- established quite an extensive and somewhat complicated system. They
- do not worship one God, as possessing preeminence; but believe in a
- plurality of divinities, who are all supposed to be very powerful,
- and, as different parts of the island, and the other islands in the
- neighborhood, have different ones, the inhabitants of such, no doubt,
- think that they have chosen the most potent and considerate one. Their
- devotion in serving their gods is remarkably conspicuous. Not only the
- whattas or offering-places of the morals are commonly loaded with
- fruits and animals, but there are few houses lacking a small place of
- the same sort. Many of them are so impressed with their obligations to
- their divinity that they will not begin a meal without first laying
- aside a morsel for their Eatooa (their god).
-
- Their prayers are also very frequent, which they chant, much after the
- manner of songs, in their festive entertainments. They also believe in
- an evil spirit, they call Etee, who sometimes does them mischief, and
- to whom, as well as to their god, they make offerings.
-
- But the mischiefs they fear from any superior invisible beings are
- confined only to temporal things. They believe the soul to be both
- immaterial and immortal. They say that it keeps fluttering about the
- lips during the pangs of death, and that then it ascends and mixes
- with, or, as they express it, is eaten by the deity. In this state it
- remains for some time; after which it departs to a certain place
- destined for the reception of the souls of men, where it exists in
- eternal night, or, as they sometimes say, in twilight or dawn. They
- have no idea of any permanent punishment after death for crimes that
- they have committed on earth. They believe in the recognition of
- relatives and friends after death and in resuming the same relations
- as on earth. If the husband dies first, the soul of his wife is known
- to him on its arrival in the land of spirits. They resume their former
- acquaintance, in a spacious house, where the souls of the deceased
- assemble to recreate themselves with the gods. From here man and wife
- retire to their own habitation, where they remain forever.
-
- The most singular part of their faith consists in claiming that not
- only man, but all other animals, trees, fruit and even stones are
- endowed with a soul, which at death, or upon being consumed or broken,
- ascends to the divinity, with whom they first mix, and afterward pass
- into the mansion allotted to each.
-
-The temples of the Tahitians were the maraes, enclosures of stones,
-where the offerings were rendered, and on certain occasions human beings
-were sacrificed. The largest marae ever built in Tahiti is located at
-Papara and the ruins of it remain to-day. At the time of Captain Cook's
-visit there were numerous maraes all over the island, which served as
-places of worship, sacrifice and burial. The supreme chief of the whole
-island was always housed in a marae and after his death the marae was
-appropriated to his family and some of the principal people. Such a
-marae differed little from the common ones, except in extent. Its
-principal part is a large, oblong pile of stones, lying loosely upon
-each other, about twelve or fourteen feet high, contracted towards the
-top, with a square area on each side, loosely packed with pebble stones,
-under which the bones of the chiefs are buried. At a little distance
-from the end nearest the sea is the place where the sacrifices are
-offered, which, for a considerable extent, is also loosely paved. There
-is here a very large scaffold, or whatta, on which the offerings, and
-other vegetables, are laid. But the animals are deposited on a smaller
-one, already mentioned, and the human sacrifices are buried under
-different parts of the pavement. The marae is the altar of other
-nations. The skulls of the human sacrifices, after a few months, are
-exhumed and preserved in the marae.
-
-Captain Cook counted forty-nine such skulls in the marae in which he
-witnessed the human sacrifice.
-
-
-
-Cannibalism did not exist in Tahiti when the island was discovered, but
-human sacrifices were quite frequently offered as a kind of religious
-ceremony to appease the anger or displeasure of some offended god. The
-victims were tramps and persons of no vocation. They were either clubbed
-or stoned to death by persons designated for this purpose by the
-priests. On Saturday, August 30, 1777, while Captain Cook was stationed
-at Matavai for the purpose of observing the transit of Venus, he
-received a message that on the following day a human sacrifice would be
-made at Attahura, to Eatooa, to implore the assistance of the deity
-against the inhabitants of the island of Moorea, who were then in a
-state of war with Tahiti. Towha, a chief and relative of the then
-reigning king, had killed a man for the sacrifice. Captain Cook, with
-several friends, accompanied King Otoo to witness the ceremony, and
-describes the event in detail:
-
- On our way we landed upon a little island, which lies off Tettaha,
- where we found Towha and his retinue. After some little conversation
- between the two chiefs, on the subject of the war, Towha addressed
- himself to me, asking my assistance. When I excused myself, he seemed
- angry; thinking it strange I, who had always declared myself to be the
- friend of their island, should not go and fight against its enemies.
- Before we parted he gave to Otoo two or three red feathers, tied up in
- a tuft; and a lean, half-starved dog was put in a canoe that was to
- accompany us. We then embarked again, taking on board a priest who was
- to assist at the solemnity. As soon as we landed at Attahura, which
- was about two o'clock in the afternoon, Otoo expressed his desire that
- the seamen might be ordered to remain in the boat, and that Mr.
- Anderson, Mr. Webber and myself might take off our hats as soon as we
- should come to the marai, to which we immediately proceeded, attended
- by a great many men, and some boys, but not one woman. We found four
- priests and their attendants, or assistants, waiting for us.
-
- The dead body, or sacrifice, was in a small canoe that lay on the
- beach and partly in the water of the sea, fronting the marai. Two of
- the priests, with some of the attendants, were sitting by the canoe,
- the others at the marai. Our company stopped about twenty or thirty
- paces from the priests. Here Otoo placed himself; we, and a few others
- standing by him, while the bulk of the people remained at a greater
- distance. The ceremony now began. One of the priest's attendants
- brought a young plantain tree, and laid it down before Otoo. Another
- approached with a small tuft of red feathers, twisted on some fibres
- of the cocoanut husk, with which he touched one of the King's, feet
- and then retired with it to his companions. One of the priests, seated
- at the marai, facing those who were upon the beach, now began a long
- prayer; and, at certain times, sent down young plantain trees, which
- were laid upon the sacrifice. During this prayer, a man, who stood by
- the officiating priest, held in his hands two bundles, seemingly of
- cloth. One of them, as we afterward found, was the royal Maro; and the
- other, if I may be allowed the expression, was the ark of the Eatooa.
- As soon as the prayer was ended, the priests at the marai, with their
- attendants, went and sat down by those upon the beach, carrying with
- them the two bundles. Here they renewed their prayers, during which
- the plantain trees were taken, one by one, at different times, from
- off the sacrifice, which was partly wrapped up in cocoa-leaves and
- small branches.
-
- It was now taken out of the canoe and laid upon the beach, with the
- feet to the sea. The priests placed themselves around it, some sitting
- and others standing; and one, or more of them, repeated sentences for
- about ten minutes. The dead body was now uncovered, by removing the
- leaves and branches, and laid in a parallel direction with the
- seashore. One of the priests then, standing at the feet of it,
- pronounced a long prayer, in which he was, at times, joined by the
- others, each holding in his hand a tuft of red feathers. In the course
- of this prayer, some hair was pulled off the head of the sacrifice,
- and the left eye taken out; both of which were presented to Otoo, and
- wrapped up in a green leaf. He did not, however, touch it; but gave,
- to the man who presented it, the tuft of feathers, which he had
- received from Towha. This, with the hair and the eye, was carried back
- to the priests. Soon after, Otoo sent to them another piece of
- feathers, which he had given me in the morning to keep in my pocket.
- During some part of this last ceremony, a kingfisher making a noise in
- the trees, Otoo turned to me saying, "That is the Eatooa;" and seemed
- to look upon it to be a good omen.
-
- The body was then carried a little way, with its head toward the
- marai, and laid under a tree, near which were fixed three broad, thin
- pieces of wood, differently but rudely carved. The bundles of cloth
- were laid on a part of the marai, and the tufts of red feathers were
- placed at the feet of the sacrifice, round which the priests took
- their stations, and we were now allowed to go as near as we pleased.
- He seemed to be the chief priest who sat at a small distance, and
- spoke for a quarter of an hour, but with different tones and gestures;
- so that he seemed often to expostulate with the dead person, to whom
- he constantly addressed himself, and sometimes asked several
- questions, seemingly with respect to the propriety of his having been
- killed. At other times, he made several demands, as if the deceased
- either now had power himself, or interest with the divinity, to engage
- him to comply with such requests. Among the petitions we understood,
- he asked him to deliver Eimeo (Moorea), Maheine its chief, the hogs,
- women and other things of the island into their hands; which was,
- indeed, the express intention of the sacrifice. He then chanted a
- prayer, which lasted nearly half an hour, in whining, melancholy tone,
- accompanied by two other priests, and in which Potatou and some others
- joined. In the course of this prayer, some more hair was plucked by a
- priest from the head of the corpse, and put upon one of the bundles.
- After this, the chief priest prayed alone, holding in his hand the
- feathers which came from Towha. When he had finished, he gave them to
- another, who prayed in like manner. Then all the tufts of the feathers
- were laid upon the bundles of cloth, which closed the ceremony at this
- place.
-
- The corpse was then carried up to the most conspicuous part of the
- marai, with the feathers, the two bundles of cloth, and the drums, the
- last of which beat slowly. The feathers and bundles were laid against
- the pile of stones, and the corpse at the foot of them. The priests
- having again seated themselves round it, renewed their prayers, while
- some of their attendants dug a hole about two feet deep, into which
- they threw the unhappy victim, and covered it over with earth and
- stones. While they were putting him into the grave, a boy squeaked
- aloud and Omai (Captain Cook's interpreter) said that it was the
- Eatooa.
-
- The human sacrifice was followed by the offering of dogs and pigs. The
- many prayers and complicated ceremonies attending human sacrifice
- stamp it as a religious rite which has undoubtedly been practiced for
- centuries. In this particular instance it meant a message through the
- instrumentality of the unfortunate victim to implore Eatooa for
- assistance in the impending war with Moorea.
-
-It is very interesting indeed to have an account of this ceremony
-preserved by an eyewitness like Captain Cook, and no apology is
-necessary here to have it reappear in all its minute details. Another
-religious ceremony of lesser import is circumcision. How this custom was
-introduced into Tahiti no one knows. It is more than probable that, in
-some way it came from the distant Orient in a modified form. It differs
-from the Jewish rite in that it is not performed on infants, but on boys
-approaching the age of puberty. Captain Cook gives the following
-description of the operation as he observed it:
-
- When there are five or six lads pretty well grown up in a neighborhood
- the father of one of them goes to a Tahoua, or man of knowledge, and
- lets him know. He goes with the lads to the top of the hills, attended
- by a servant; and, seating one of them properly, introduces a piece of
- wood underneath the foreskin, and desires him to look aside at
- something he pretends is coming. Having thus engaged the young man's
- attention to another object, he cuts through the skin upon the wood,
- with a shark's tooth, generally at one stroke. He then separates, or
- rather turns back, the divided parts; and, having put on a bandage,
- proceeds to perform the same operation on the other lads. At the end
- of five days they bathe, and the bandages being taken off, the matter
- is cleaned away. At the end of five days more they bathe again, and
- are well; but a thickness of the prepuce, where it was cut, remaining,
- they go again to the mountains with the Tahoua and servant; and a fire
- being prepared, and some stones heated, the Tahoua puts the prepuce
- between two of them, and squeezes it gently, which removes the
- thickness. They then return home, having their heads and other parts
- of their bodies, adorned with odoriferous flowers, and the Tahoua is
- rewarded for his services by their fathers, in proportion to their
- several abilities, with presents of hogs and cloth; and if they be
- poor, their relations are liberal on the occasion.
-
-How the wise man managed to keep the boys together during two such
-painful ordeals is not easy to understand, but as they remained at their
-posts until all had passed through it speaks volumes for their good
-behavior and manly courage. That the Tahitians possessed many admirable
-virtues during their paganism proves only too clearly that
-
- Virtue is shut out from no one; she is open to all, accepts all,
- invites all, gentlemen, freedmen, slaves, kings and exiles; she
- selects neither house nor fortune; she is satisfied with a human
- without adjuncts.
-
- SENECA.
-
-
-
-These virtues, the prayers, the sacrifices, the belief in a supreme
-being and eternity, show that the Tahitians were imbued with a natural
-religion, for
-
- The existence of God is so many ways manifest and the obedience we owe
- Him so congruous to the light of reason, that a great part of mankind
- give testimony to the law of nature.
-
- LOCKE.
-
-The natives had no literature nor any communication with the outside
-world farther than the neighboring island groups. Their only book was
-nature, and this was read and studied with eagerness and intelligence.
-Their ancient history consisted of legendary lore handed down from
-generation to generation. But
-
- There are books extant which they must needs allow of as proper
- evidence; even the mighty volumes of visible nature, and the
- everlasting tables of right reason.
-
- BENTLEY.
-
-From century to century, from generation to generation, these people,
-without leaving a permanent record of what had happened and without
-being conscious of art or science, lived and died in a state of
-happiness and contentment.
-
- For he had no catechism but the creation, needed no study but
- recollection, and read no book but the volume of the world.
-
- SOUTH.
-
-That ignorance and vice should have existed among this primitive people,
-so completely isolated from the progressive part of the world, is not
-strange, as they lived in a land of plenty, fed and clothed, as it were,
-by the almost unaided resources of nature, conditions largely
-responsible for their inborn laziness. Ignorance and superstition go
-hand in hand. The Tahitians have always been extremely superstitious and
-both civilization and Christianization have been powerless in
-eradicating this national evil. We must, however, judge them not too
-severely in this matter, as superstition is by no means uncommon amongst
-us at the present day. Our best poets are not exempt from it.
-
- I think it is the weakness of mine eyes
-
- That shapes this wondrous apparition:
-
- It comes upon me!
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
- Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth unseen, both when we
- wake and when we sleep.
-
- MILTON.
-
- A person terrified with the imagination of spectres is more reasonable
- than one who thinks the appearance of spirits fabulous and groundless.
-
- ADDISON.
-
-With the progress and spread of education of the masses, superstition
-will gradually be starved out here as elsewhere. The greatest vice of
-the Tahitians is licentiousness, which remains as when Captain Cook
-visited the island. In speaking of the looseness of the marital
-relations, he says:
-
- And so agreeable is this licentious plan of life to their disposition,
- that the most beautiful of both sexes thus commonly spend their
- youthful days, habituated to the practice of enormities which would
- disgrace the most savage tribes, but are peculiarly shocking amongst a
- people whose general character in other respects has evident traces of
- the prevalence of humane and tender feelings.
-
-The Tahitians have reason to claim that
-
- The vices collected through so many ages for a long time past flow in
- upon us.
-
- SENECA.
-
-Intemperance among the natives has never had a firm foothold in the
-island and tobacco is used with moderation. Gambling, such a common vice
-among the peoples of the Orient, has never been cultivated and practiced
-to any extent in Tahiti. These ocean-bound people, living in happy and
-contented isolation, had no desire for national or personal wealth or
-fame, neither had they any inclination or desire for art or the
-sciences. They believed in the mottoes:
-
- If you are but content, you have enough to live upon with comfort.
-
- PLAUTUS.
-
-and
-
- Ambition breaks the ties of blood, and forgets the obligations of
- gratitude.
-
- SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
-They lived a restful, unselfish life, happy in the companionship of
-their families, relatives and friends, with no morbid desires to
-distract them from the full enjoyment of what Nature showered upon them
-with bountiful never-failing liberality.
-
- Their customs are by Nature wrought; But we, by art, unteach what
- Nature taught.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-THE INSIGNIA OF TAHITIAN ROYALTY
-
-Tahitian royalty was hereditary, and women were not excluded. There were
-chiefs and chiefesses governing tribes, and head chiefs and head
-chiefesses ruling over several tribes or the whole island. There were no
-crowns and no sceptres. The insignia of royalty was a belt ornamented
-with feathers. The red feathers were what the diamonds and other
-precious stones are in ancient and modern crowns. This belt was called
-Maro. Captain Cook gives the following description of a maro:
-
- It is a girdle, about five yards long, and fifteen inches broad; and,
- from its name, seems to be put on in the same manner as is the common
- maro, or piece of cloth used by these people to wrap round the waist.
- It was ornamented with red and yellow feathers; but mostly with the
- latter, taken from a dove found upon the island. The one end was
- bordered with eight pieces, each about the size and shape of a
- horseshoe, having their edges fringed with black feathers. The other
- end was forked, and the points were of different lengths. The feathers
- were in square compartments, ranged in two rows, and otherwise so
- disposed to produce a pleasing effect. They had been first pasted or
- fixed upon some of their own cloth, and then sewed to the upper end of
- the pendant which Captain Wallis had displayed, and left flying
- ashore, the first time that he landed at Matavai.
-
-This insignia of office was highly respected by the natives and was
-handed down from one generation of rulers to the other, carrying with it
-the sovereignty of the office. One of the civil wars in the island was
-caused by a failure on the part of one of the chief esses (Purea) to
-deliver the maro to her legitimate successor.
-
-DISEASES OF TAHITI
-
-Before the Europeans came to Tahiti, the beautiful little island was a
-sanatorium. The natives were temperate, frugal in their habits,
-subsisting almost exclusively on fish, fruit and vegetables, and lived
-practically an outdoor life even in their bamboo huts. They were
-unencumbered by useless clothing and spent, as they do now, much of
-their time in sea and fresh-water bathing. They were almost exempt from
-acute destructive diseases. They were free from the most fatal of acute
-contagious and infectious diseases, such as smallpox, measles,
-scarlatina, cholera, etc. Tuberculosis and venereal diseases were
-unknown before the white man invaded the island. The immediate effect of
-the European civilization on the health and lives of the natives was
-frightful. On this subject I will let Ariitaimai speak:
-
- When England and France began to show us the advantages of their
- civilization, we were, as races then went, a great people. Hawaii,
- Tahiti, the Marquesas, Tonga, Samoa and New Zealand made a respectable
- figure on the earth's surface, and contained a population of no small
- size, better fitted than any other possible community for the
- condition in which they lived. Tahiti, being the first to come in
- close contact with the foreigners, was first to suffer. The people,
- who numbered, according to Cook, two hundred thousand in 1767,
- numbered less than twenty thousand in 1797, according to the
- missionaries, and only about five thousand in 1803. This frightful
- mortality has been often doubted, because Europeans have naturally
- shrunk from admit ting the horrors of their own work, but no one
- doubts it who belongs to the native race. Tahiti did not stand alone
- in misery; what happened there happened everywhere, not only in the
- great groups of high islands, like Hawaii with three or four hundred
- thousand people, but in little coral atolls which could only support a
- few score.
-
-
-
-These are strong words, but they are nevertheless only too true.
-Civilization brings to savage races curses as well as blessings. The
-primitive people are more receptive of new vices than new virtues.
-
-In 1880 the number of inhabitants had again increased to thirteen
-thousand five hundred, but since that time it has been reduced to eleven
-thousand, as shown by the last census. When Captain Cook visited the
-island he emphasized particularly the absence of acute diseases. In
-speaking of chronic diseases he remarks:
-
- They only reckon five or six which might be called chronic, or
- national disorders, amongst which are the dropsy and the _fefai_, or
- indolent swellings before mentioned as frequent at Tongataboo.
-
-The fearful, swift depopulation of the island was caused by the
-introduction of new acute infectious and contagious diseases, such as
-smallpox, measles, whooping-cough, la grippe, etc., which among these
-people was attended by a frightful mortality. It was only three years
-ago that an epidemic of measles, a trifling disease with us, claimed
-several hundred lives, including many adults, and extended to nearly all
-of the islands of the entire group. The disease that is now threatening
-the extinction of the race in a short time is pulmonary tuberculosis.
-The natives are extremely susceptible to this disease, and the small
-native houses, crowded with large families, are the breeding stations
-for infection.
-
-The French government has at last recognized the need of taking active
-measures to improve the sanitary conditions of their colony and protect
-the natives against the spread of infectious diseases. A corps of three
-physicians, sent by the French government on this mission, made the
-voyage from San Francisco to the island on the steamer _Mariposa_ with me.
-The names of these physicians are: Dr. Grosfillez, surgeon-major of the
-first class of the colonial troops; Dr. H. Rowan, a graduate of the
-Pasteur Institute, and Dr. F. Cassiau, of the clinic of Marseilles. The
-military surgeon receives an annual salary of fifteen hundred dollars,
-the two civil doctors twelve hundred dollars each. They are under
-contract for five years. They have been given judicial power to enforce
-all sanitary regulations they see fit to institute. They will be
-stationed at different points and will establish a requisite number of
-lazarettos, something which will fill a long-felt and pressing need.
-
-
-
-PRESENT PREVAILING DISEASES
-
-The average temperature of the inhabited part of the island, which can
-not be less than 78 to 80 degrees Fahrenheit, has a relaxing influence
-on the natives and much more so on the small contingent of whites. The
-Europeans and Americans find it necessary every three to five years to
-seek for a few months a cooler climate to restore their energies and
-vigor. The government officials and officers of the small garrison are
-not obliged to serve for more than the same time consecutively, when
-they are relieved from their posts and commands. It is this relaxation
-which, to a certain extent, at least, is responsible for the great
-mortality of comparatively mild, acute, infectious diseases, and the
-severity of pulmonary tuberculosis among the natives. Tuberculosis of
-the lymphatic glands, skin, bones and joints appears to be extremely
-rare. The moisture-laden atmosphere and the suddenness with which the
-cool land and ocean breezes set in after the heat of the day, are
-conducive to the development of rheumatic affections, which are
-prevalent in all parts of the island, more especially during the rainy
-season in midwinter. The same can be said of bronchial affections and
-pneumonia. The free and unrestrained intercourse among natives accounts
-for the rapid spread of tuberculosis and acute infectious diseases among
-the entire population and from island to island.
-
-The sanitary commission now engaged, in efforts to reduce the mortality
-of the natives will establish rules and regulations which will have for
-their object the prevention of dissemination of acute as well as chronic
-infectious diseases, and will undoubtedly accomplish much toward the
-preservation of the race; but these officers will meet with stubborn
-opposition on the part of the natives when attempts are made, in their
-interest, to curtail their personal liberties. The ties of relationship
-and friendship among the natives are very strong, and become most
-apparent in case of misfortunes and sickness. Smallpox breaks out almost
-every year, and claims its share of victims. Vaccination is supposed to
-be compulsory, but the natives are inclined to escape it. Vaccination is
-done gratuitously at the Military Hospital for all natives who can be
-induced to submit to it. Under present conditions it is almost
-impossible to reach the inhabitants of the small atoll islands.
-
-Like in all tropic countries, tetanus is of quite frequent occurrence.
-The small native pony is found everywhere, and as the rural natives are
-all barefooted and spend much of their time in the jungles in
-impregnating the flower of the vanilla-bean and gathering fruits, wounds
-prone to infection with the tetanus bacillus are of frequent occurrence.
-
-Malarial diseases are comparatively rare, although the
-plasmodium-carrying mosquitoes are numerous and aggressive, and children
-in the country districts are nude, and the men limit their clothing to
-the wearing of a loin-cloth. No case of typhoid fever has been known to
-have originated in the island. For this there exists a satisfactory
-explanation. The exemption in this island from this disease, so widely
-distributed over the entire part of the inhabited globe, is due entirely
-to an abundant supply of the purest drinking water supplied by the
-numerous mountain streams. Nearly all the inhabitants live on the coast,
-near the outlet of a brook or stream, where, consequently, there is no
-danger whatever of water-contamination. I found three cases of typhoid
-fever in the Military Hospital, members of one family, who had been
-brought there from one of the neighboring atoll islands.
-
-Varicose veins, varicocele and hydrocele are very common. The absence of
-anything like a large ulcer in many cases of large and numerous varicose
-veins of the leg, I attributed to the toughness of the skin of the bare
-legs. Venereal diseases are widespread throughout the entire island, and
-more especially in Papeete and the near-by larger villages. For over a
-hundred years the natives have suffered from this scourge brought there
-by the European sailors and adventurers. Syphilis has been transmitted
-from generation to generation until it has contaminated the major part
-of the population, for
-
- The gods visit the sins of the fathers upon the children.
-
- EURIPIDES.
-
-and
-
- The wickedness of a few brings calamity on all.
-
- PUBLIUS SYRUS.
-
-The length of time the disease has existed among the natives has
-established a certain degree of tolerance or immunity, as it pursues a
-comparatively mild course, as I found very few instances of the ravages
-of the remote results of syphilis. I saw only one case of saddle nose,
-caused by tertiary syphilis.
-
-Leprosy is not as prevalent as in the Hawaiian Islands, but isolated
-cases are found in nearly all the islands belonging to this group, being
-more prevalent in some than in others. Segregation has never been
-attempted. The lepers mix freely with the members of their families and
-neighbors, and are not shunned by any one. I was informed that many of
-the lepers, much disfigured by the disease, seek an island where many of
-these unfortunates have founded a colony for the purpose of escaping
-from public gaze. There, away from relatives and friends, they spend
-their short span of life and await patiently the final relief which only
-death can bring.
-
- O Death, the Healer, scorn thou not, I pray. To come to me; of
- cureless ills thou art The one physician. Pain lays not its touch upon
- a corpse.
-
- ÆSCHYLUS.
-
-Elephantiasis in its worst forms has taken a firm hold on the natives,
-especially the inhabitants of the near-by island of Moorea. There this
-disease can be studied in all its stages, from a slight enlargement of
-one of the extremities to colossal swellings, which, when the upper and
-lower extremities are affected at the same time, make it necessary for
-the patient to crawl on his hands and feet in dragging himself from
-place to place. Regarding elephantiasis as it exists in Tahiti and the
-other islands of the French colony, I will make use of a few extracts
-taken from a valuable paper on this subject by Dr. Lemoine, recently in
-charge of the Military Hospital, and published in one of the government
-reports. According to this author, who has seen much of this disease in
-Tahiti and surrounding islands, it may affect most regions of the body,
-and not infrequently makes its appearance as an acute affection with all
-the symptoms characteristic of lymphangitis, including quite a violent
-continued remittent form of fever, which lasts two or three months. The
-acute form is, almost without exception, complicated by synovitis of the
-joints of the affected limb, which he regards as almost pathognomonic of
-the disease, differentiating it from ordinary forms of lymphangitis.
-After the subsidence of the acute symptoms and in the chronic form the
-disease is essentially a chronic lymphangitits, accompanied by marked
-enlargement of the veins. According to his observations the regions most
-frequently involved are the lower extremities, external genitals, and
-lastly, the hands and forearms. Three years ago I was given an
-opportunity to see at the hospital and poorhouse at Antigua, West
-Indies, ninety cases of elephantiasis, and not in a single one of them
-did the disease affect the upper extremity, while in the French colony
-of the South Seas this is not infrequently the case. I do not know that
-a satisfactory explanation has ever been given why the disease should
-behave so differently in fixing its location in the two groups of
-islands. Lemoine, as well as other writers on elephantiasis, has seen
-the disease become stationary by the removal of the patient to a colder
-climate. Europeans become susceptible to elephantiatic infection after a
-prolonged residence in tropical countries where the disease prevails.
-
-Lemoine does not agree with Manson, who believes that elephantiasis is
-caused by the _Filaria sanguinis_, and is suspicious that the essential
-parasitic cause is a yet undiscovered microbe. He made blood
-examinations night and day of patients under his care, and was unable to
-constantly detect the filariæ in their embryonic state in the peripheral
-blood, and consequently claims that the presence of filaria in the
-organism is not an infallible diagnostic indication, and that their
-abundance is not proportionate to the intensity of the disease. The fact
-that the elephantiatics improve in colder climates he regards as another
-proof that filariasis is not the essential cause of the disease.
-
-
-
-In a number of cases extirpation of the infiltrated enlarged lymphatic
-glands was followed by decided improvement, and in the case of a
-Tahitian the improvement remained at the end of three years. He has also
-operated on a number of cases by partial excision of the mass, first on
-one side of the limb, then on the other, with decided benefit to the
-patient in most of them. In some cases deep incisions through the entire
-thickness of the indurated mass afforded relief and resulted in
-diminution of the size of the swelling. He relates the details of the
-case of a native, fifty years old, the subject of elephantiasis of the
-lower limbs, that he operated on in two stages several weeks apart,
-removing first a large section from the anterior and later from the
-posterior part of the swelling, and as shown by the accompanying
-illustrations in the report depicting the condition of the limbs before
-and after operation, with an excellent result. However, in some of the
-cases the benefit thus derived did not last for any considerable length
-of time.
-
-In making the excision, the superfluous skin is excised with the
-underlying indurated tissues, and the skin margins reflected for some
-distance in order to create sufficient room for a more liberal removal
-of the deep tissues. In one case, that of a woman thirty-eight years of
-age, the patient died two weeks after the second operation. Death was
-attributed to loss of blood and the debilitated condition of the patient
-when she entered the hospital. In another case, a Tahitian, thirty-five
-years old, affected with elephantiasis of all limbs and the external
-genitals, he operated successfully on one of the arms, the seat of an
-enormous swelling below the elbow. The excised mass weighed fifteen
-kilograms. Owing to the large size of the swelling, the operation proved
-one of great difficulty, and on account of the tension incident to the
-approximation of the margins of the flaps the sutures cut through and
-the wound ultimately healed by granulation. At the second operation
-nearly the entire mass was removed, with the result that the wound
-finally healed after a prolonged suppuration and the patient was
-relieved of the incumbrance caused by the great weight of the swelling.
-The relief afforded induced the patient to request additional operations
-for the removal of the swellings involving other regions of the body,
-but as the surgeon soon after left the island his desire could not be
-gratified.
-
-The climate of Tahiti is not congenial for pulmonary and rheumatic
-affections, as the atmosphere is too moist. It is admirably adapted for
-patients the subjects of nervous affections in all their protean forms.
-The quietude, balmy air and pleasing surroundings are the best
-therapeutic agents to secure mental rest and refreshing sleep. It is in
-the treatment of such affections that a trip to Tahiti can not be too
-strongly recommended.
-
-THE KAHUNA OR NATIVE DOCTOR
-
-For centuries the practice of the healing art was largely in the hands
-of priests. They ministered to the body as well as the soul. Their
-practice was purely empirical and the surgery, even of the most skilled,
-rude and often brutal. The human mind is very much inclined to look upon
-disease and the methods used to effect a cure as something mysterious.
-Even at this late day many people who are well educated and who in
-everything else seem to possess a liberal amount of good common sense,
-have very strange ideas in regard to disease and the means employed in
-treatment. Promises to cure and a liberal expenditure of printers' ink
-render them an easy prey to mysterious methods. All races and all tribes
-have always had among them men and women in whom they confided in case
-of accident or disease. Very often priesthood and medicine were combined
-in the same person. Among the ancient Tahitians the chief was at the
-same time priest and medical adviser. The American Indians had their
-medicine-men, the Tahitians and other South Sea Islanders their Kahuna.
-It is very interesting to know something of the early practice of
-medicine and surgery among the Tahitians. Captain Cook gives them great
-credit from what he saw of their surgery:
-
- They perform cures in surgery, which our extensive knowledge in that
- branch has not, as yet, enabled us to imitate. In simple fractures,
- they bind them up with splints, but if part of the substance of the
- bone be lost, they insert a piece of wood, between the fractured ends,
- made hollow like the deficient part. In five or six days, the rapooa,
- or surgeon, inspects the wound, and finds the wood partly covered with
- the growing flesh. In as many more days, it is generally entirely
- covered; after which, when the patient has acquired some strength, he
- bathes in the water, and recovers.
-
-In speaking of medicine he says:
-
- Their physical knowledge seems more confined; and that, probably,
- because their diseases are fewer than their accidents. The priests,
- however, administer the juices of herbs in some cases; and women who
- are troubled with after-pains, or other disorders after child-bearing,
- use a remedy which one would think needless in a hot country. They
- first heat stones, as when they bake their food; then they lay a thick
- cloth over them, upon which is put a quantity of a small plant of the
- mustard kind; and these are covered with another cloth. Upon this they
- seat themselves, and sweat plentifully, to obtain a cure. They have no
- emetic medicine.
-
-In referring to the few indigenous diseases he adds:
-
- But this was before the arrival of the Europeans; for we have added to
- this short category a disease which abundantly supplies the place of
- all the others; and is now almost universal [syphilis]. For this they
- seem to have no effectual remedy. The priests, indeed, sometimes give
- them a medley of simples; but they own that it never cures them, and
- yet, they allow that, in a few cases, nature, without the assistance
- of a physician, exterminates the poison of this fatal disease, and
- perfect recovery is produced. They say that a man affected with it
- will often communicate it to others in the same house, by feeding out
- of the same utensils, or handling them, and that, in this case, they
- frequently die, while he recovers; though we see no reason why this
- should happen.
-
-On his fourth voyage to the Society Islands Captain Cook learned to what
-fearful extent syphilis had spread throughout all of the islands of the
-group and became aware what ravages it had caused among the natives. On
-visiting new islands he did all in his power to protect the natives
-against this scourge by excluding all women visitors from the ship and
-by strictly enjoining persons known to be infected from landing. On the
-probable effects of these new regulations he comments:
-
- Whether these regulations, dictated by humanity, had the desired
- effect, or no, time only can discover. I had been equally attentive to
- the same object when I first visited the Friendly Islands; yet I
- afterward found, with real concern, that I had not succeeded, and I am
- afraid that this will always be the case, in such voyages as ours,
- whenever it is necessary to have a number of people on shore.
-
-
-
-Massage as a remedial agent in the treatment of disease originated in
-the Orient, and the Tahitians were familiar with it and frequently made
-use of it. On this subject Captain Cook can speak from personal
-experience. During his stay in Tahiti in 1777 he suffered evidently from
-a severe attack of sciatica, the pain extending from the hip to the
-toes. King Otoo's mother, his three sisters and eight more women came on
-his ship one evening for the purpose of giving him treatment and
-remained all night to fulfill their well-meant mission. Here is the
-account of the treatment to which he was subjected by the women:
-
- I accepted the kindly offer, had a bed spread for them upon the cabin
- floor, and submitted myself to their directions. I was desired to lay
- myself down amongst them. Then, as many of them as could get around
- me, began to squeeze me with both hands, from head to foot, but more
- particularly on the parts where the pain was lodged, till they made my
- bones crack, and my flesh became a perfect mummy. In short, after
- undergoing this discipline about a quarter of an hour, I was glad to
- get away from them. However, the operation gave me immediate relief,
- which encouraged me to submit to another rubbing down before I went to
- bed; and it was so efficient that I found myself pretty easy all the
- night after. My female physicians repeated their prescription the next
- morning, before they went ashore, and again in the evening, when they
- returned on board; after which, I found the pains entirely removed,
- and the cure being perfected, they took leave of me the following
- morning. This they call _romee_, an operation which, in my opinion, far
- exceeds the flesh-brush, or anything of the kind that we make use of
- externally. It is universally practised amongst the islanders, being
- sometimes performed by men, but more generally by women.
-
-PHYSICIANS IN TAHITI
-
-Tahiti is not an Eldorado for doctors. The entire island has only eleven
-thousand inhabitants and the great majority of them are too poor to pay
-for medical services. The only place in Tahiti where a doctor can be
-found is in Papeete. At the time I visited the island there was only one
-physician in private practice in the capital city, Dr. Chassaniol, a
-retired naval surgeon, the only private practitioner in the whole group
-of islands. The bulk of medical practice is in the hands of the
-government physician, always a military man who has at the same time
-charge of the Military Hospital and takes care of the sick poor, and
-supervises all matters pertaining to sanitation. The only other
-physicians in the island are the naval surgeons on board a small
-man-of-war almost constantly anchored in the harbor of Papeete. The
-government physician is privileged to practice outside of the hospital,
-and from this source he receives the bulk of his income. As the resident
-physician and the government physician are the only qualified physicians
-in the whole archipelago, it requires no stretch of the imagination to
-realize that until the present time the French government has not made
-adequate provisions for their subjects who require the services of a
-physician.
-
-
-
-The Tahitians have not lost their faith in their Kahunas or native
-doctors, who without any medical knowledge, practice their art. These
-men, with a local reputation as healers of disease, are to be found in
-nearly every village. They are well thought of and are influential
-members of society in their respective communities. Like the
-medicine-men of our Indians, they make use of roots, bark and herbs as
-remedial agents, and the natives, like many of our own people, have more
-faith in this mysterious kind of medication than in modern,
-concentrated, palatable drugs prescribed by the most eminent physician.
-To the credit of these native medicine-men, it must be said that they
-give to all afflicted who apply for treatment not only their services,
-but also the medicines without any expectation of a financial reward or
-even the gratitude of their clients.
-
-HÔPITAL MILITAIRE
-
-The military hospital at Papeete is the only one in the French colonial
-possession of the Society Islands, numbering one hundred and sixty-eight
-islands and containing thirty thousand inhabitants, of whom eleven
-thousand live in Tahiti. As some of these islands are more than one
-hundred miles apart, it is somewhat strange that the French government
-has not taken earlier action in establishing small cottage hospitals in
-a number of the larger islands, as in case of severe injuries or sudden
-illness the natives of the distant islands are not within reach of
-timely medical aid and the transportation of a sick or injured person to
-Papeete from the far-off islands or villages by small schooners or
-canoes is necessarily slow and in many instances dangerous. The Sanitary
-Commission now stationed in the islands will, it is to be hoped, act
-promptly in remedying this serious defect in the care of the sick
-natives.
-
-
-
-The Military Hospital at Papeete is an old structure of brick and
-cement, situated near the western limits of the city in a large square
-yard inclosed by a high stone wall, surmounted by a crest of fragments
-of glass, which imparts to the inclosure a prison-like appearance, the
-austerity of which, however, is much relieved by beautiful tropical
-trees, shrubbery and flowers in front of the entrance and in the
-courtyard. The hospital proper comprises seven buildings, only one of
-which is two stories high. The hospital has accommodations for forty
-beds. The officers' rooms contain two beds each; the remaining space is
-divided into small wards for privates and civilians. In one ward, the
-windows of which are strongly barred, are kept the military prisoners,
-and another small ward is devoted to obstetrical cases. The rooms and
-wards are well ventilated and clean, the beds comfortable; the hospital
-furniture otherwise is scanty and antique. The drug-room is large,
-richly supplied with capacious jars, mortars of all sizes, herbs, roots
-and a complete outfit for making infusions, decoctions and tinctures,
-which reminds one very vividly of an apothecary shop of half a century
-ago. This department is in charge of a pharmacist who, besides mixing
-drugs, does some chemical and bacteriological work in a small and
-imperfectly equipped laboratory. The operating-room is an open
-passageway between two adjoining wards, and all it contained suggestive
-of its use were an operating table of prodigious size and decidedly
-primitive construction, and, suspended from the wall, a tin irrigator,
-to which was attached a long piece of rubber tubing of doubtful age. The
-hospital is well supplied with water, and contains a bathroom, a
-shower-bath and modern closets. The hospital is in charge of the
-government physician, who is always a medical officer of the colonial
-troops, detailed for this special service, usually for a period of three
-years. From the official reports I gleaned that on an average this
-institution takes care of about three hundred and fifty patients a year.
-At the time of my visit the number of patients did not exceed fifteen,
-among them one in the prison ward. All of the patients were the subjects
-of trifling affections, with the exception of three cases of typhoid
-fever sent to the hospital from one of the atoll islands. The patients
-are being cared for by three Catholic sisters and orderlies as they are
-needed. The poor are admitted gratuitously; private patients pay from
-six to fifteen francs a day. The hospital is beautifully located on the
-principal street of the city and faces the charming little harbor. A
-small private hospital for the foreign residents and tourists is needed
-here and under proper management would prove a remunerative investment.
-
-THE ISLAND OF PLENTY
-
- O Christ! it is a goodly sight to see
-
- What heaven hath done for this delicious land.
-
- BYRON.
-
-The wealth of Tahiti is on its surface. Its mountains are not pregnant
-with precious metals nor has nature stored up in their interior material
-for fuel and illumination, as none of these are needful to make the
-people content and happy. The Tahitian has no desire to accumulate
-wealth; the warm rays of the sun reduce the use of fuel to a minimum,
-and the millions of glittering stars and the soft silvery light of the
-moon in the clear blue sky create a bewitching light at night, which,
-more than half of the time, would make artificial illumination a
-mockery. Then, too, Tahiti is the land of gentle sleep and pleasant
-dreams, where people do not turn night into day, but rise with the sun
-and retire soon after he disappears in the west behind the vast expanse
-of the ocean. God created Tahiti for an ideal island home and not as a
-place for get-rich-quick methods, speculation and bitter competition for
-business, for
-
- Where wealth and freedom reign, contentment fails,
-
- And _honor lacks_ where commerce long prevails.
-
- GOLDSMITH.
-
-Tahiti's fabulous wealth consists in its inexhaustible soil and the
-perennial warm, stimulating breath of the tropic sun. It is the island
-of never-fading verdure and vigorous and never-ceasing vegetation. The
-fertile soil, the abundant rainfall throughout the year, the warm
-sunshine and the equable climate are most conducive to plant-life and
-here these conditions are so harmonious that there can be no failure of
-crops in the Lord's plantation. There never has been a famine in Tahiti,
-and there never will be, provided the government protects the
-magnificent mountain forests—nature's system of irrigation. Tahiti's
-food-supply is select and never-failing, and is furnished man with the
-least possible exertion on his part. The bounteous provisions nature has
-made here for the abode of man are a marvel to the visitor and after he
-has once seen them and has become familiar with them he can not escape
-the conclusion that he is in
-
- A land flowing with milk and honey.
-
- JEREMIAH xxxii:22.
-
-The food products and fruits grown in the forests without the toil of
-man are admirably adapted for the climatic conditions, being laxative
-and cooling, and undoubtedly account for the excellent health of the
-natives before the invasion of the island by the Europeans. The island
-was destined for the natives, and the natives were suited to the island.
-
- Man's rich with little, were his judgment true;
-
- Nature is frugal, and her wants are few;
-
- These few wants answer'd, bring sincere delights;
-
- But fools create themselves new appetites.
-
- YOUNG.
-
-Content with what the sea and forest provided for them, these children
-of Nature lived a happy life, free from care, free from morbid desires
-for wealth or fame.
-
- O blissful poverty!
-
- Nature, too partial, to thy lot assigns
-
- Health, freedom, innocence, and downy peace, —
-
- Her real goods, — and only mocks the great
-
- With empty pageantries.
-
- FENTON.
-
- No sullen discontent nor anxious care.
-
- E'en though brought thither, could inhabit there.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-The Tahitian people, before they tasted the questionable advantages of
-European civilization, had much in common and lived happily in the full
-enjoyment of Nature's varied and bountiful gifts. Tribal life was family
-life, and public affairs were managed to suit the wants of the people,
-and if any one in power failed in his duties, the people took the law in
-their own hands and corrected the evil, usually without bloodshed. If
-the people were not prosperous according to our ideas of life, they were
-at least happy, and
-
- We must distinguish between felicity and prosperity; for prosperity
- leads often to ambition, and ambition to disappointment.
-
- LANDOR.
-
-TAHITI'S NATURAL BREAD SUPPLY
-
-The Tahitians have no corn or grain of any kind out of which to make
-bread. They found in the forests excellent substitutes for bread, and
-more healthful for that climate, in the form of breadfruit, wild
-plantain and tubers rich in starch. This is the kind of bread they have
-been eating for centuries, and which they prefer to our bread to-day.
-When the island was densely populated and the demand on nature's
-resources exceeded the supply, the natives had to plant trees, roots and
-tubers in vacant spaces in the forest, high up on the mountainsides,
-where they grew luxuriantly without any or little care, and by these
-trifling efforts on the part of man the food-supply kept pace with the
-increase of the population. Trees and plants distributed in this manner
-found a permanent home in the new places provided for them, and have
-since multiplied, and thus increased greatly the annual yield. Evidences
-of dissemination of bread and fruit-yielding trees and plants by the
-intervention of man are apparent to-day throughout the island by the
-presence of cocoa-palms, breadfruit and other fruit trees, and
-plantains, in localities where nature could not plant them, in places
-formerly inhabited but abandoned long ago when the population became so
-rapidly decimated by the virulent diseases introduced into the island by
-the Europeans. To-day the fruit and fruit-supply is so abundant that it
-is within easy reach of every family and can be had without money and
-without labor. We will consider here a few of the most important
-substitutes for bread on which the Tahitians largely subsist:
-
-
-
-_Breadfruit_.—Breadfruit is the most important article of food of the
-Tahitians. It is the fruit of the breadfruit tree _Arfocarpus incisiva_
-(Linné), a tree of the natural order, _Artocarpaceæ_, a native of the
-islands of the Pacific Ocean and of the Indian Archipelago. This fruit
-is one of the most important gifts of nature to the inhabitants of the
-tropics, serving as the principal part of their food, the inner tough
-bark of the tree furnishing a good material for native cloth, while the
-trunk of the tree is used as a material for canoes. The exudation
-issuing from cuts made into the stem, a resinous substance, is in use
-for closing the seams of canoes. Several varieties of breadfruit trees
-are to be found in Tahiti, differing in the structure of their leaves
-and in the size and time of ripening of the fruit, so that ripe
-breadfruit is obtainable more or less abundantly throughout the year.
-The foliage of this tree is the greenest of all green, and it is this
-deep green which distinguished this tree at once from its neighbors. The
-male flowers are in catkins, with a two-leaved perianth and one stamen;
-the female flowers are nude. The leaves are large, pinnatifid,
-frequently twelve to eighteen inches long, smooth and glossy on their
-upper surface. The much branched tree attains a height of twenty to
-fifty feet. The fruit is a _sorosis_, a compound or aggregate the size of
-a child's head, round or slightly oblong, light green, fleshy and
-tuberculated on the surface. The rind is thick, and marked with small
-square or lozenge-shaped divisions, each having a small elevation in the
-middle. The fruit hangs by a short, thick stalk from the small branches,
-singly or in clusters of two or three together. It contains a white,
-somewhat fibrous pulp, which when ripe becomes juicy and yellow, but has
-then a rotten taste. The fruit is gathered for use before it is ripe,
-and the pulp is then white and mealy, of the consistence of fresh bread.
-The fruit is prepared in many ways for food, roasted on hot coals,
-boiled or baked, or converted by the experienced native cook into
-complicated dainty dishes. The common practice in Tahiti is to cut each
-fruit into three or four pieces and take out the core; then to place
-heated stones in the bottom of a hole dug in the ground; to cover them
-with green leaves, and upon this place a layer of the fruit, then
-stones, leaves and fruit alternately, till the hole is nearly filled,
-when leaves and earth to the depth of several inches are spread over
-all. In half an hour the breadfruit is ready; the outsides are, in
-general, nicely browned, and the inner part presents a white or
-yellowish cellular substance. Breadfruit prepared in this manner and by
-other methods of cooking is very palatable, as I can speak from my own
-experience, slightly astringent and highly nutritious, a most excellent
-dietetic article for the tropics. The tree is very prolific, producing
-two and sometimes three crops a year. When once this tree has gained a
-firm foothold in a soil it cherishes, and in a climate it enjoys, it
-exhibits a tenacity to reproduce itself to an extent often beyond
-desirable limits. Of this Captain Cook writes:
-
- I have inquired very carefully into their manner of cultivating the
- breadfruit tree; but was always answered that they never plant it. The
- breadfruit tree plants itself, as it springs from the roots of the old
- ones, so that the natives are often under the necessity of preventing
- its progress to make room for trees of other sorts to afford some
- variety in their food.
-
-The timber is soft and light, of a rich yellow color, and assumes when
-exposed to the air the appearance of mahogany.
-
-_Manioc_.—Manioc is another important article of food in Tahiti and
-likewise serves as an excellent substitute for baker's bread. It is the
-large, fleshy root of _Manihot utilissima_, a large, half-shrubby plant of
-the natural order _Euphorhiaceæ_, a native of tropical America, and much
-cultivated in Tahiti as an article of food. In this island the plant has
-run wild in some of the ravines formerly inhabited. The plant grows in a
-bushy form, with stems usually six to eight feet high, but sometimes
-much higher. The stems are brittle, white, and have a very large pith;
-the branches are crooked. The leaves are near the ends of the branches,
-large, deeply seven-parted, smooth and deep green. The roots are very
-large, turnip-like, sometimes weighing thirty pounds, from three to
-eight growing in a cluster, usually from twelve to twenty-four inches in
-length. They contain an acrid, milky juice in common with other parts of
-the plant, so poisonous as to cause death in a few minutes; but as the
-toxic effect is owing to the presence of hydrocyanic acid, which is
-quickly removed by heat, the juice, inspissated by boiling, forms the
-excellent sauce called _casareep_; and fermented with molasses it yields
-an intoxicating beverage called _onycou_; whilst the root, grated, dried
-on hot metal plates and roughly powdered, becomes an article of food. It
-is made into thin plates which are formed into cakes, not by mixing with
-water, but by the action of heat, softening and agglutinating the
-particles of starch. The powdered root prepared in this manner is an
-easily digestible and nutritious article of farinaceous food. The root
-is largely made use of in the manufacture of starch and is exported from
-Tahiti for this purpose to a considerable extent. The starch made from
-this root is also known as Brazilian arrowroot, and from it tapioca is
-made. Manioc is propagated by cuttings of the stem, and is of rapid
-growth, attaining maturity in six months.
-
-_Sweet Cassava_.—Sweet cassava is the root of _Manihot Aipi_, a woody plant
-indigenous to tropical South America, growing in great abundance in the
-dense forest of the mountain valleys of Tahiti. The plant grows to a
-height of several feet and has large long leaves growing from the foot
-of the stem. The root is reddish and nontoxic; it can therefore be used
-as a culinary esculent, without any further preparation than boiling,
-while its starch can also be converted into tapioca. The _Aipi_ has tough,
-woody fibres, extending along the axis of the tubers, while generally
-the roots of the manioc (bitter cassava) are free from this central
-woody substance.
-
-_Arrowroot_ or _Arru Root_.—The commercial arrowroot is prepared from
-different starch-yielding roots, but the bulb of the _Maranta marantaceæ_
-produces more starch and of a better quality than any of the others. It
-is a native of the West Indies and South America, and is cultivated
-quite extensively in Tahiti. Many little patches of this plant may be
-seen along the road from Papeete to Papara, where the lowland soil is
-well adapted for its cultivation. The starch-producing plant which is
-cultivated most extensively in Tahiti and other South Sea Islands is the
-_Tacca pinnatifolia_. This perennial plant will even thrive well in the
-sandy soil near the shore. The stalk, with terminal spreading pinnatifid
-leaves, is from two to three feet high and the root is a tuber about the
-size of a small potato. The tacca starch is much valued in medicine, and
-is particularly used in the treatment of inflammatory affections of the
-gastro-intestinal canal.
-
-_Taro or Tara_.—Taro is another very important food-product of Tahiti, as
-well as other islands of the Pacific, notably the Hawaiian Islands. It
-is the root of _Colocasia macrorhiza_, a plant of the natural order
-_Araceæ_, of the same genus with _cocoa_. The plant thrives best in low,
-marshy places. In all of the South Sea Islands it is very extensively
-cultivated for its roots, which constitute in these islands a staple
-article of food, excellent substitutes for potatoes and bread. The roots
-are very large, from twelve to sixteen inches in length, and as much in
-circumference. They are washed in cold water to take away their
-acridity, which is such as to cause excoriation of the mouth and palate.
-The roots are cooked in the same way as the breadfruit, the rind being
-first scraped off. Another very common way of eating taro is in the form
-of _poi_. This method of preparing the root was known to the Tahitians
-when Captain Cook visited the island. He compared _poi_ with "sour
-pudding." It requires some skill to make _poi_. The root, finely grated,
-is allowed to ferment over night. It tastes sour and is a refreshing,
-delicate and nutritious dish, when served ice-cold. The plant has no
-stalk; the petioled heart-shaped leaves spring from the root. The flower
-is in the form of a spathe. The boiled leaves can be used as a
-substitute for spinach.
-
-_Wild Plantain_.—The wild plantain furnishes its liberal share of
-food-supply for the Tahitians. It is a tree-like, perennial herb (_Musa
-paradisiaca_) with immense leaves and large clusters of the fruits. In
-its appearance it resembles very closely the banana, but differs from it
-as the hands and fingers of the bunches of fruit are turned in the
-opposite direction. The fruit is long and somewhat cylindrical, slightly
-curved, and, when ripe, soft, fleshy and covered with a thick but tender
-yellowish skin. This plant is indigenous to Tahiti and is found in
-abundance in the forests. The fruit is cooked or baked and is keenly
-relished by the natives.
-
-All of the articles of food I have referred to above are easily
-digested, palatable and nutritious, and for the Tahiti climate more
-healthful than bread and potatoes, on which the masses of people living
-in colder climates subsist to a large extent. I attribute the
-comparative immunity of the South Sea Islanders from attacks of
-appendicitis principally to their diet, which is laxative, easily
-digested and not liable to cause fermentation in the gastro-intestinal
-canal. Appendicitis does occur in these islands, but this disease is
-extremely rare as compared with the frequency with which it is met in
-Europe, and more especially in the United States. The Americans are the
-most injudicious and reckless eaters in the world, which goes far in
-explaining the prevalence of gastric and intestinal disorders among our
-people.
-
-
-
-THE COCOANUT, THE MEAT OF THE TAHITIANS
-
-It is fortunate that the inhabitants of the tropics have no special
-liking for a meat diet, as the free indulgence in meat could not fail in
-resulting detrimentally to the health of the inhabitants. The
-continuously high temperature begets indolence, and indolence tends to
-diminish secretion and excretion, conditions incompatible with a
-habitual consumption of meat. Nature has established fixed rules
-concerning the manner of living in the tropics. She deprives man of the
-appetite for meat and other equally heavy articles of food, and supplies
-him with nourishment adapted for the climate. It is under such climatic
-conditions that we are made to realize that
-
- The more we deny ourselves, the more the gods supply our wants.
-
- HORATIUS.
-
-and
-
- We can not use the mind aright when the body is filled with excess of
- food.
-
- CICERO.
-
-For the preservation of health in the tropics, it is necessary that the
-food should be laxative, cooling, easy of digestion and nutritious. Fish
-and fruit of various kinds meet these requirements. From observations
-and experience, the ignorant natives have made a wise selection of what
-is best for them to eat, and know what to avoid. High living brings its
-dire results in temperate and cold climates, but any one indulging in it
-in the tropics will curtail his life, as it can not fail to be
-productive, in a short time, of organic changes of a degenerative type
-in important internal organs, which soon begin to menace life and never
-fail in diminishing the vital resistance against acute diseases. Luxury
-in the tropics in the way of eating and drinking is a dangerous
-experiment, and it is well to remember, especially when living in a hot
-climate, that
-
- By degrees man passes to the enjoyments of a vicious life, porticoes,
- baths and elegant banquets; this by the ignorant was called a
- civilized mode of living, though in reality it was only a form of
- luxury.
-
- TACTICUS.
-
-No such mistakes are made by the natives of Tahiti as long as they
-remain true to their ancient manner of living. With few exceptions,
-indeed, they lack the means of imitating the foreigners in living a life
-of luxury. Any native who departs too far from the simple, natural life
-of his ancestors will pay dearly for the doubtful pleasures of a life of
-luxury. The average native, fortunately, has no such inclinations; he is
-satisfied to live the simple, natural life his forefathers led, and he
-follows the scriptural advice.
-
- And having food and raiment, let us be therewith content. I. Timothy
- vi:8.
-
-
-
-Nature has provided for the South Sea Islanders something better than
-beef and mutton in the form of meat—fish and cocoanut. Fish are very
-abundant all around the coast of Tahiti, and the lagoons, where the
-fishing is mostly done, are as quiet as inland lakes. More than two
-hundred varieties of fish have been found in these waters. But the real
-and best meat for the Tahitians is the cocoanut. The meat of this
-wonderful nut contains a large per cent, of oil, which supplies the
-system with all the fatty material it requires, and for the tropic
-climate this bland, nutritious vegetable oil is far superior to any
-animal fats. We will give here the Cocoa-palm the liberal space it so
-well deserves:
-
-THE COCOA-PALM
-
- Through groves of palm
-
- Sigh gales of balm,
-
- Fire-flies on the air are wheeling;
-
- While through the gloom
-
- Comes soft perfume,
-
- The distant beds of flowers revealing.
-
- SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
-The cocoa-palm is the queen of the forests of the South Sea Islands. The
-tall, slender, branchless, silvery stem and fronded crown of this
-graceful tree distinguish it at once from all its neighbors and indicate
-the nobility of its race. The great clusters of golden fruit of giant
-size, partially obscured by the drooping leaves and clinging to the end
-of the stem, supply the natives with the necessities of life. The
-cocoa-palm is the greatest benefactor of the inhabitants of the tropics.
-
- It is meat, drink and cloth to us.
-
- RABELAIS.
-
- Fruits of palm-tree, pleasantest to thirst
-
- And hunger both.
-
- MILTON.
-
-This noble tree grows and fructifies where hard manual labor is
-incompatible with the climate, in islands and countries where the
-natives have to rely largely on the bounteous resources of nature for
-food and protection. The burning shores of India and the islands of the
-South Pacific are the natural homes of the cocoa-palm. It has a special
-predilection for the sandy beach of Tahiti and the innumerable atoll
-islands near to and far from this gem of the South Seas. The giant nuts
-often drop directly into the sea and are carried away by waves and
-currents from their native soil to strange islands, where they are cast
-upon the sandy shore, to sprout and prosper for the benefit of other
-native or visiting tribes. By this manner of dissemination, all of these
-islands have become encircled by a lofty colonnade of this queen of the
-tropics.
-
- Beautiful isles! beneath the sunset skies
-
- Tall silver shafted palm-trees rise between
-
- Tall orange trees that shade
-
- The living colonnade:
-
- Alas! how sad, how sickening is the scene
-
- That were ye at my side would be a paradise.
-
- MARIA BROOKS.
-
-The cocoa-palm (_Cocos nucifera_), is a native of the Indian coasts and
-the South Sea Islands. It belongs to a genus of palms having pinnate
-leaves or fronds, and male and female flowers on the same tree, the
-latter at the base of each spadix. It is seldom found at any
-considerable distance from the seacoast, except where it has been
-introduced by man, and generally thrives best near the very edge of the
-sea. In Tahiti isolated cocoa-palms are found on the lofty hilltops,
-projecting, with their proud crowns of pale green leaves, far above the
-level of the sea of the dense forest and impenetrable jungles. This
-transplantation from shore to the sides and summits of the foot-hills
-had its beginning before the discovery of the island, when the
-overpopulation made it necessary to provide for a more abundant
-food-supply. There it has prospered and multiplied since without the
-further aid of man, yielding its rich harvests of fruit with unfailing
-regularity. The frightful reduction in the number of inhabitants since
-the white man set his foot on the island has made this additional
-food-supply superfluous, as the palms within easier reach in the
-lowlands along the shore more than meet the present demands.
-
-
-
-The cocoa-palm is a proud but virtuous tree. Its dense cluster of
-delicate roots does not encroach upon the territory of other trees, but
-claims only a very modest circular patch of soil from which to abstract
-the nourishment for the unselfish, philanthropic tree. The base of the
-stem is wide and usually inclined, but a few feet from the ground
-becomes straight and cylindrical, with nearly the same diameter from
-base to crown. The curve of the stem is caused by the effects of the
-prevailing winds on the yielding, slender stem of the youthful tree, but
-with increasing growth and strength, it rises column-like into the air,
-balancing its fruit-laden massive crown in uncompromising opposition to
-the invisible aerial force. It is only in localities exposed to the full
-power of strong and persistent trade-winds that the full-grown trees
-lean in the same direction in obedience to the unrelenting common
-deforming cause. The full-grown tree is, on an average, two feet in
-diameter, and from sixty to one hundred feet high, with many rings
-marking the places of former leaves, and having, at its summit, a crown
-of from sixteen to twenty leaves, which generally droop, and are from
-twelve to twenty feet in length. These giant leaves furnish an excellent
-material for thatched roofs, and in case of need, a few leaves, properly
-placed, will make a comfortable, waterproof tent. The fruit grows in
-short racemes, which bear, in favorable situations, from five to fifteen
-nuts; and ten or twelve of these racemes, in different stages of
-fructification, may be seen at once on a tree, about eighty or one
-hundred nuts being its ordinary annual product. For the purpose of
-answering the requirements of primitive man, the Creator has ordained
-that this tree shall yield a continuous harvest from one end of the year
-to the other. Flowers and fruit in all stages of ripening grace the
-crown at all times of the year. The young cocoanut contains the
-delicious, cooling milk, and the soft pulp, a nourishing article of
-food. The mature nut is an excellent substitute for meat, as the kernel
-contains more than seventy per cent, of a fixed, bland, nutritious oil.
-The tree bears fruit in from seven to eight years from the time of
-planting, and its lifetime is from seventy to eighty years. Its greatest
-ambition during youth is to reach the clouds and equal its oldest
-neighbors in height. Young trees, with a stem less than four inches in
-diameter, rival their veteran neighbors in height, devoting their future
-growth to the increase in the dimension and strength of the stem, and
-their vital vigor to the bearing of its perennial, unfailing yield of
-fruit for the benefit of man and beast. The stem, when young, contains a
-central part which is sweet and edible, but when old, this is a mass of
-hard fibre. The terminal bud (palm cabbage) is esteemed a delicacy when
-boiled or stewed or raw in the form of a vegetable salad. The sweet sap
-(toddy) of the cocoa-palm, as of some other palms, is an esteemed
-beverage in tropic countries, either in its natural state, or after
-fermentation, which takes place in a few hours; and, from the fermented
-sap (palm wine), a strong alcoholic liquor (_arrack_), is obtained by
-distillation. The root of the cocoa-palm possesses narcotic properties.
-Every part of this wonderful tree is utilized by the untutored
-inhabitants of the tropics. The dried leaves are much used for the
-thatch, and for many other purposes, as the making of mats, screens,
-baskets, etc., by plaiting the leaflets. The strong midribs of the
-leaves supply the natives with oars. The wood of the lower part of the
-trunk is very hard, and takes a beautiful polish. The fibrous centre of
-old stems is made into salad. By far the most important fibrous part of
-the cocoa-palm is the coir, the fibre of the husk of the imperfectly
-ripened nut. The sun-dried husk of the ripe nut is used for fuel, and
-also, when cut across, for polishing furniture, scrubbing floors, etc.
-The shell of the nut is made into cups, goblets, ladles, etc., and these
-household articles are often finely polished and elaborately ornamented
-by carving. This, the most generous of all trees, from the time of its
-birth until it yields to the ravages of time, serves man in hundreds of
-different ways, furnishing him with food and drink, clothing,
-building-material, fuel, medicine, most exquisite delicacies, wine,
-spirits and many articles of comfort and even of luxury. What other tree
-but the cocoa-palm could have been in the mind of Milton when he wrote:
-
- In heav'n the trees
-
- Of life ambrosial fruitage bear, and vines
-
- Yield nectar.
-
-
-
-The cocoa-palm is a peaceful, modest, virtuous tree. It prefers its own
-kin, but is charitable to its neighbors, irrespective of race. It towers
-far above the sea of less favored trees, which find in its shade
-protection against the burning rays of the tropic sun and the fury of
-the trade-winds. Proudly it stands guard at the shores of the coral-girt
-islands of the South Pacific, waving its lofty, fruit-laden crown,
-responding alike to the cool, refreshing land breezes and the humid
-trade-winds in the balmy air of the tropics. Peaceful and lovely is a
-forest of palms, where
-
- Leaves live only to enjoy love, and throughout the forest every tree
- is luxuriating in affectionate embrace; palm, as it nods to palm,
- joins in mutual love; the poplar sighs for the poplar; plane whispers
- to plane, and alder to alder.
-
- CLAUDIANUS.
-
-The sight of a forest of cocoa-palms from a distance is imposing, a walk
-through it full of enchantment. Nowhere does this noble tree appear to
-better advantage than in Tahiti. This, the most favored of all islands,
-is engirdled by an almost unbroken belt of palm-forest, stretching from
-the very verge of the ocean to the base of the foot-hills, with the
-towering, tree-clad mountains for a background; a forest planted by the
-invisible hand of Nature, a forest cared for by Nature, a forest which
-produces nearly all of the necessities of life for the natives from day
-to day, and year to year, with unfailing regularity. Enter this forest
-and the eye feasts on a scene which neither the pen of the most skilled
-naturalist nor the brush of the ablest landscape artist can reproduce
-with anything that would do justice to nature's inexhaustible resources
-and artistic designs. Such a scene must be gazed upon to be appreciated.
-Between the colonnade of symmetrical silvery stems and crowns of
-feathery fronds, inlaid with the ponderous golden fruit, the eye catches
-glimpses of the blue, placid ocean, the foam-crested breakers, of the
-still more beautifully blue dome of the sky, the deep green carpet of
-the unbroken tropic forest thrown over the mountainsides, or the naked,
-rugged, brown peaks basking in the sunlight, and on all sides flowers of
-various hues and most delicate tints. Surely,
-
- Who can paint
-
- Like Nature? Can imagination boast.
-
- Amid its gay creation, hues like hers,
-
- Or can it mix them with that matchless skill.
-
- And lose them in each other, as appears
-
- In every bud that blows?
-
- THOMSON.
-
-Add to the pleasures flashed upon the mind by the ravished eye, the
-perfumed, soothing air of the tropics, the sweet sounds of the aeolian
-harp as the gentle breeze strikes its well-timed chords in the fronded
-crowns of the palms overhead, the bubbling of the ripples of the near-by
-ocean as they kiss the sandy rim of the island shore, and the clashes of
-the breakers as they strike with unerring regularity the coral reef, the
-outer wall of the calm lagoon, and your soul will be in a mood to join
-the poet in singing the praises of nature:
-
- O Nature!
-
- Enrich me with knowledge of thy works:
-
- Snatch me to heaven!
-
- THOMSON.
-
-Queen of the tropic isles, guardian of their sun-kissed strands, friend
-of their dusky, simple children of Nature! Continue in the future as you
-have done in the past, to dispense your work of generosity and unselfish
-charity, to sustain and protect the life of man and beast in a climate
-you love and revere, a climate adverse for man to earn his daily bread
-by the sweat of his brow! I have seen your charms in your favorite
-island-abode and studied with interest your innumerable deeds of
-generosity, your full storehouse for the urgent needs of man and your
-safe refuge for the inhabitants of the air. Had Whittier visited the
-island Paradise, your native home, he would have written in the positive
-in the first stanza, when he framed that beautiful verse:
-
- I know not where His islands lift
-
- Their fronded palms in air;
-
- I only know I can not drift
-
- Beyond His love and care!
-
-There is no other country and no other island in the world that has such
-a variety of indigenous fruit trees as Tahiti. Add to these trees that
-have furnished the natives with an abundance of fruit for centuries, the
-fruit trees that have been introduced since the island was discovered,
-and many of which flourish now in a wild state in the forests, and it
-will give some idea concerning the wealth of fruit to be found in the
-forests of Tahiti. Most of the inland habitations away from the coast
-have been abandoned long ago, and in all these places, in the valleys
-and high up on the mountainsides, many kinds of exogenous fruit trees,
-planted by former generations, have gained a permanent foothold. Here
-they multiply, blossom, ripen their fruit, and all the islanders have to
-do is to gather the annual crop. Here delicious little thin-skinned
-oranges grow, and the finest lemons and limes can be had for the
-gathering. The poor find here
-
- Fruits of all kinds in coat
-
- Rough or smooth rind, or bearded husk or shell,
-
- She gathers tribute large, and on the board
-
- Heaps with unsparing hand.
-
- MILTON.
-
-
-
-Nothing reminds one more of Tahiti being the forbidden Garden of Eden,
-than the abundance of fruit that grows in the forests without the
-intervention of man. Some kind of fruit can be found during all seasons
-of the year, and
-
- Small store will serve, where store
-
- All seasons, ripe for use, hangs on the stalk.
-
- MILTON.
-
-It is here not as in most countries where
-
- The poor inhabitant beholds in vain
-
- The redd'ning orange and the swelling grain.
-
- ADDISON.
-
-as the poorest of the poor have access to Nature's orchard and can fill
-their palm-leaf baskets with the choicest fruits. The Tahitian
-
- He feeds on fruits, which of their own accord
-
- The willing ground and laden tree afford.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-This mingling, in the most friendly manner, of the old forest trees with
-familiar fruit trees introduced from distant lands and laden with golden
-fruit, is a most beautiful sight. The fruit trees stand their ground
-even against the most aggressive shrubs, and it is often no easy matter
-to reach the ripe hiding fruit in the dense network of branches thrown
-around and between the branches of the imprisoned tree. What a blessing
-these acid fruits are to the natives, sweltering under the rays of the
-tropic sun! How easy it is for them to make a cooling, refreshing drink!
-Take a young cocoanut, open it at one end, and add to its milk the juice
-of a lime or a lemon, and the healthiest and most refreshing drink is
-made.
-
- Bear me, Pomona! to thy citron groves,
-
- To where the lemon and the piercing lime,
-
- With the deep orange glowing through the green,
-
- Their lighter glories lend.
-
- THOMSON.
-
-It is claimed that the large apple family is the descendant of the
-Siberian crab-apple, modified by climate, soil and grafting. This
-statement appears to me incorrect, as I have seen a tree in the Hawaiian
-forests which bears a real sweet apple which in shape and taste has a
-strong resemblance to the apples of our orchards. The tree is from
-twenty to thirty feet in height, slender and few branched. The same tree
-is found in the forests of Tahiti, and its fruit is much sought after by
-the natives. It would be difficult to connect the wild apple tree of the
-South Sea Islands with the Siberian crab-apple, to which it bears no
-resemblance, either in the appearance of the tree or its fruit. Let us
-now consider a few of the fruit trees which adorn and enrich the forests
-of Tahiti:
-
-_Alligator Pear_, or _Avocado_.—This is the most delicate and luscious of
-all the fruit-products of the Tahitian forests, where it is found in its
-wild state in great abundance. It is the fruit of the _Persea gratissima_,
-a tree belonging to the natural order _Lauraceæ_, an evergreen tree of the
-tropic regions of America and the South Sea Islands. It attains a height
-of from thirty to seventy feet, with a slender stem and dome-like, leafy
-top. The branches, like the stem, are slender, and ascend on quite an
-acute angle from their base. The leaves resemble those of the laurel.
-The flowers are small, and are produced toward the extremities of the
-branches. The fruit is a drupe, but in size and shape resembles a large
-pear. The rind is green, thin, and somewhat rough on the outside. In the
-center of the pulp is a large, heart-shaped kernel, wrapped in a thin,
-paper-like membrane. The pulp is green or yellowish, not very sweet, but
-of a delicious taste and exiquisite flavor, and contains about eight per
-cent, of a greenish fixed oil. The way to eat this delicious fruit is to
-cut it in two lengthwise, remove the kernel, season with sweet oil,
-vinegar, salt and pepper, and eat with a teaspoon. In the form of a
-salad it is one of the daintiest of all dishes. The softness of the pulp
-and the richness in oil have led the French to call this fruit
-"Vegetable butter." The seeds of the alligator pear have come into
-medical use at the instance of Dr. Froehlig, and particularly through
-the efforts of Park, Davis & Co., a manufacturing firm. The alligator
-pear is a very perishable fruit, which accounts for its scarcity and
-fabulous price in our markets.
-
-_Pawpaw or Papaya_ is the fruit of the _Carica Papaya_, natural order
-_Papayaceæ_. It is an exceedingly graceful, branchless little tree, which
-grows to the height of from ten to twenty feet and is of short vitality.
-Its natural home is in South America and the islands of the Pacific. The
-cylindrical stem is grayish white, roughened in circles where the
-previous whorls of leaves had their attachment. The leaves are from
-twenty to thirty inches long and are arranged in the form of a whorl at
-the very top of the stem, where also the fruit grows, close to the stem.
-The fruit when ripe is light yellow, very similar to a small melon, and
-with a somewhat similar flavor. The skin is very thin and the pulp
-exceedingly soft, hence a very perishable fruit. The seeds are numerous,
-round and black, and when chewed have, in a high degree, the pungency of
-cresses. It requires time to acquire a taste for this healthy, very
-digestible tropical fruit, but when once developed, it is keenly
-relished. It is eaten either raw or boiled. It possesses digestive
-properties of considerable value, which have been utilized in the
-preparation of a vegetable pepsin. The acrid, milky sap of the tree or
-the juice of the fruit much diluted with water, renders any tough meat
-washed with it, tender for cooking purposes, by separating the muscular
-fibres (Dr. Holder). It is said even the exhalations from the tree have
-this property; and meats, fowls, etc., are hung among its leaves to
-prepare them for cooking. The tree is of very rapid growth, bears fruit
-all the year and is very prolific.
-
-_Mango_ is the fruit of _Mangifera Indica_. It is a stately,
-broad-branching, very shady tree, from thirty to forty feet in height,
-belonging to the natural order _Anacardiaceæ_. The stem is short, from
-eight to ten feet, when it divides into long, graceful branches, with an
-impenetrable foliage, a fine protection against the rain and the
-scorching rays of the sun. The bark is almost black and somewhat rough.
-The leaves are in clusters, lanceolate, entire, alternate, petioled,
-smooth, shining, tough, and about seven inches long, with an agreeable
-resinous smell. The flowers are small, reddish white or yellowish, in
-large, erect, terminal panicles. The fruit is kidney-shaped, smooth,
-greenish yellow, with or without ruddy cheeks, varying greatly in size
-and quality, and containing a large, flattened stone, which is covered
-on the outside with fibrous filaments, largest and most abundant in the
-inferior varieties, some of which consist chiefly of fibre and juice,
-while the finer ones have a comparatively solid pulp. The size varies
-from that of a large plum to that of a man's fist. The largest and
-finest mangoes are found in Tahiti. The fruit is luscious and agreeably
-sweet, with an aromatic flavor and slightly acid taste. The kernels are
-nutritious, and have been cooked for food in times of scarcity. A mango
-tree laden with its golden fruit is a pleasing sight, and reminds one
-vividly of a Christmas tree.
-
-_Lime_.—The fruit of _Citrus Planchoni, Citrus Australis Planchon_. The lime
-tree of Tahiti was undoubtedly introduced from Eastern Australia, where
-it is found as a noble tree, fully forty feet high, or, according to C.
-Hartmann, even sixty feet high. In Tahiti the tree is small, and in the
-dense jungles hardly exceeds the size of a shrub. The stem, as well as
-its numerous slender, wide-spreading, prickly branches, is very crooked.
-The fruit is similar to the lemon, but much smaller in size, being only
-about one and one-half inches in diameter, and almost globular in shape,
-with a smooth, green, thin rind and an extremely acid, pungent juice.
-For a thirst-quenching drink, the lime-juice is far preferable to the
-lemon.
-
-_Pomegranate_.—The fruit of _Punica Granatum_, a shrub belonging to the
-natural order _Granataceæ_. This historic and useful shrub grows
-luxuriantly and with little or no care, in the fertile, sun-kissed soil
-of Tahiti. More than one-half of the interior of the oval purple fruit
-consists of large black seeds. The seedless variety has evidently never
-been introduced. The juice is subacid and very palatable. The flowers
-are ornamental, and sometimes are double. The rind of the fruit and the
-bark of the roots possess valuable medicinal properties. Consider for a
-moment what nature has done for the support, comfort and pleasure of the
-inhabitants of Tahiti, and we are ready to admit the truth of what the
-prince of poets said:
-
- Here is everything advantageous to life.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-And we can answer with a positive yes the question proposed by another
-famous poet, in the beautiful stanza:
-
- Know'st thou the land where the lemon trees bloom,
-
- Where the gold orange glows in the deep thicket's gloom,
-
- Where a wind ever soft from the blue heaven blows,
-
- And the groves are of laurel and myrtle and rose?
-
- GOETHE.
-
-
-
-THE FORESTS OF TAHITI
-
-The primeval forests are the pride of Tahiti. Indirectly they are the
-wealth of the little island. They have been spared the ravages of the
-woodman's ax. The forests have been kind to the natives and the natives
-to the forests. The avaricious lumberman, the greatest enemy of public
-wealth and general prosperity, has fortunately so far not had a design
-on the magnificent forests of Tahiti, and may he never be permitted to
-carry on his work of destruction in this island paradise! The giant
-trees, growing the finest and most valuable timber, hold out much
-inducement to get-rich-quick men, but they have been destined for a
-better purpose; they, with the more menial companions, the humble, lowly
-shrubs, attract the clouds, determine rain, retain moisture and fill the
-river-beds, creeks and rivulets with the purest water. The forests
-extend from the shore to near the highest mountain-peaks, making up one
-great green sea of foliage, interrupted here and there by the summits of
-hills, ridges, and bare spots of brown, volcanic earth, where vegetation
-of any kind has been forbidden to take a foothold. Along and near the
-coast are the charming groves of cocoa-palms, where the ordinary trees,
-out of deference to the queen of the tropic forests, are few and modest
-in their ambition to compete with her in height. Here the guava shrub,
-groaning under the weight of its golden fruit, adds to the beauty of the
-grove. A walk through such a grove, with glimpses of the blue ocean and
-the verdant tree-clad hills and mountains, will bring the conviction
-that
-
- The groves were God's first temples.
-
- BRYANT.
-
-Raising the eyes and looking up the steep incline of the mountains
-clothed in perennial verdure by a dense virgin forest, we are almost
-instinctively reminded of the beautiful lines of Dryden:
-
- There stood a forest on the mountain's brow, which
-
- overlook'd the shady plains below;
-
- No sounding axe presumed these trees to bite, coeval
-
- with the world; a venerable sight.
-
-The forest in the tropics has no rest. From one end of the year to the
-other, it appears the same. There is no general disrobing at the bidding
-of an uncompromising, stern winter. There are no arctic chills to suffer
-and no burden of snow to brave. Most of the trees are evergreen, and the
-few that imitate the example of their kind in the North by an annual
-change of their leaves, perform this task almost imperceptibly. There
-are no bald crowns and bare arms. Spring, summer and autumn mingle
-throughout the year; blossoming and ripe fruits go hand in hand in the
-same tree or neighboring trees. A walk through a tropic forest is no
-easy thing, owing to the dense interlacing and often prickly
-undergrowth, but the visitor is amply rewarded for his efforts. Every
-step brings new revelations, new surprises. Nowhere are there any signs
-of deforestation, either by fire or the cruel, thoughtless hand of man.
-You are in a forest
-
- Where the rude ax, with heaved stroke,
-
- Was never heard the nymphs to daunt,
-
- Or frown them from their hallow'd haunts.
-
- MILTON.
-
-The biggest trees are in the shaded, rich ravines and far up on the
-mountainside or hill-tops. They seem to be conscious of their
-superiority and power in the selection of their abode. Look at one of
-these monsters, with wide-spread, giant branches and impenetrable
-foliage, and
-
- View well this tree, the queen of all the grove;
-
- How vast her bole, how wide her arms are spread.
-
- How high above the rest she shoots her head!
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-
-
-But in these forests, so full of life and perpetual activity,
-indications of death are seen here and there. The numerous climbing
-vines which, serpent-like, creep up and embrace in their deathly grasp
-some young, vigorous tree, have no good intentions for their patient,
-helpless host. The struggle may last for years, but the ultimate result
-is sure. The cruelty of the unwelcome intruder increases with his age
-and, strength. The fight for life becomes more and more intense. The
-plant-serpent throttles its victim more and more, penetrates its body
-with its additional roots, and sucks the very life-blood from its
-vitals. What promised to become the giant of the forest sickens and
-succumbs to a slow, lingering, ignominious death. The victory is
-complete and he now stands with
-
- Pithless arms, like a wither'd vine,
-
- That droops his sapless branches to the ground.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-The ruthless climber has accomplished its purpose and it has become so
-strong and has made such intricate interlacements with adjoining trees
-that it holds the corpse erect in its cold embrace for an indefinite
-period of time, until some strong wind lays low forever the victor with
-the vanquished.
-
-Like everywhere else where the soil is fertile and other conditions for
-plant-growth favorable, so in the Tahitian forest, rank plant-life
-prospers. The lantana (Lantana Crocca) a shrubby plant two to four feet
-high, with beautiful little yellow and purple flowers arranged in
-umbels, has overrun the whole island. It is here, as in some of the
-other islands of the Pacific, the most aggressive and most troublesome
-of all weeds, and it is this plant which interferes with a more abundant
-growth of grass and consequently with a more productive pasturage in
-wild and cultivated grounds.
-
-The sense of isolation and solitude is nowhere more profound than in a
-tropical forest, and more especially so in Tahiti, as here animal life
-is scarce. The only game found are domestic hogs and chickens, which
-have run wild, and these are scarce. There are no birds of plumage and
-few song-birds. Chameleons frequent sunny spots, and butterflies, of all
-sizes and colors, enliven the air. There are no snakes and few poisonous
-insects; no deer, bear, leopards or monkeys. Even the ordinary
-water-birds, with the exception of a small species of sea-gull and
-occasionally a crane, seem to avoid this island.
-
-A day spent in the wonderful forests of Tahiti will bring no regrets; on
-the other hand, will be replete with pleasure and profit, and will leave
-charming pictures on memory's tablet which time can never efface. On the
-brightest day, darkness reigns underneath the almost impenetrable roof
-of branches, vines and foliage. Here and there the sun's rays penetrate
-through the gigantic bowery maze, and fall upon the ground with almost
-unnatural intensity, frequently appearing and disappearing as the wind
-plays with the leaves.
-
- The green leaves quiver with the cooling wind,
-
- And make a checker'd shadow on the ground.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-The solemn silence of the forest, the grandeur of vegetation, the
-effects of light and shadows, are impressive, and the visitor will carry
-away from Tahiti an inspiring and lasting mental picture of
-
- Her forests huge,
-
- Incult, robust, and tall, by Nature's hand
-
- Planted of old.
-
- THOMSON.
-
-NOTED FOREST TREES OF TAHITI
-
-The forests of Tahiti comprise many species of trees, the timber of
-which would command a high price in the market, but it is my intention
-here to enumerate and briefly describe only a few of the trees which
-interest the visitor the most, as he will see them wherever he goes as
-shade trees, and as component parts of the magnificent forests.
-
-_Purau or Burao_ is the _Hibiscus tiliaceus_ (Linné), (syn.: _Paritium
-tiliaceum_), order _Malvaceæ_. The flowers are bell-shaped, of a beautiful
-canary color, but quickly fall and turn to red or reddish brown. They
-are made up of five imbricated petals, painted a dark brown at their
-base and inner surface. The glaucous leaf-like calix is five-parted. The
-five stamens form a sheath for the pistil, which is five-parted and
-brown at its apex. The large leaves are used by the native housewives in
-lieu of a table-cloth. It is said that the macerated leaves and flowers
-are used to heal burns, bruises, etc. (McDaniels). The trunks of the
-largest trees are made into canoes. The inner tough bark serves as a
-substitute for hemp in the making of twine and ropes. The roots of this
-tree have earned a reputation as a valuable medicine in the treatment of
-diseases of the gastro-intestinal canal. This is a common and beautiful
-shade tree in Papeete, and if the traveler visits the island in January
-or February he will find it in full bloom. The dark green leaves and the
-light yellow flowers form a very pleasing contrast. It attains a height
-of from forty to sixty and more feet. The short and often very crooked
-stem sends off numerous large branches, clothed, like the stem, in a
-rough black bark. The branches are often so crooked and tortuous that
-they form such an intricate entanglement that even the woodman's ax
-would meet with difficulties to isolate and liberate them. The branches
-appear to have an intrinsic tendency to reach the ground, and when they
-do so strike root and become daughter trees, growing skyward, and soon
-rival in height the parent tree. In the woods it is not uncommon to find
-the parent tree surrounded at variable distances by numerous daughter
-trees. Many such ambitious branches are formed into graceful arches
-before they attain the wished-for independence. This tree, with its
-numerous offspring and interlacing branches, contributes much in
-rendering the jungles in which it grows impenetrable in many places. The
-wood is white and soft. The leaves are as large as an ordinary small
-soup-plate, long-petioled, seven-ribbed, broadly cordate and acuminate,
-dark green and glossy on their upper, and strongly veined and paler, on
-their lower surface.
-
-
-
-_Banyan Tree_.—The _Ficus Indica_, a native tree of India, remarkable for
-its vast rooting branches, outstripping in this respect by far the tree
-just described. It is a species of wild fig, has ovate, heart-shaped,
-entire leaves, about five or six inches long, and produces a fruit of a
-rich scarlet color, not larger than a cherry, growing in pairs front the
-axils of the leaves. The branches send shoots downwards, which, when
-they have rooted, become stems; the tree in this manner spreading over a
-great surface, and enduring for many years. The banyan tree found in the
-island of Tahiti docs not spread as much as the Indian tree, and the
-aerial roots which later become a part of the trunk after they strike
-the ground and develop an independent existence, become supplied with
-new roots. Most of the aerial roots of the Tahitian tree take their
-origin from the lower part of the trunk and remain in close contact with
-it after they strike the ground, and many of them remain dangling free
-in the air in vain attempts to secure an independent existence, the
-branch roots being comparatively few. The tree is found at short
-intervals along the ninety-mile drive, and the largest one I saw was in
-the front yard of the Cercle Bougainville, the French club in Papeete.
-
-_Pandanus Tree, Screw Pine_.—The _Pandanus Freycinctia_ natural order of
-_Pandaneæ_. There are about fifty species of this tree, natives of South
-Africa to Polynesia. The pandanus tree of Tahiti is a palm-like tree
-which is found along the shore close to the water's edge, with a short
-white stem, much branched with long, simple imbricated leaves, usually
-spiny on the back and margin, their base embracing the stem, their
-spiral arrangement being well marked. The base of the stem does not
-touch the ground, but rests on a cluster of strong roots, which diverge
-somewhat before they strike the soil. The leaves are much used for
-thatch roofs and the thin, compact, superficial layer serves as wrappers
-for the native cigarettes. The fruit is edible and is eaten by the
-natives in times of scarcity of food.
-
-_Flame Tree, Flamboyer_.—The _Brachychiton acerifolium_ is the Australian
-flame-tree introduced, as is asserted, into Tahiti by Bougainville. It
-is a magnificent and common shade tree in Papeete, but is also found
-scattered all along the coast of the island. It is an evergreen tree
-with showy trusses of crimson flowers. This is the most beautiful of all
-ornamental trees in the island. The mucilaginous sap, when exuded,
-indurates to a kind of bassarin—tragacanth.
-
-VANILLA CULTIVATION IN TAHITI
-
-The cultivation of the aromatic vanilla-bean is one of the principal
-industries of Tahiti. The bean grows luxuriantly in the shady forests in
-the lowlands along the coast, and requires but little care. The climate
-and soil of Tahiti are specially adapted to the cultivation of the
-vanilla-bean, as the very best quality is grown here. The _Vanilla
-aromatica_ is a genus of parasitic _Orchidaceæ_, a native of tropic parts
-of America and Asia, which springs at first from the ground and climbs
-with twining stems to the height of from twenty to thirty feet on trees,
-sending into them fibrous roots, produced from nodes, from which the
-leaves grow. These roots, drawing the sap from the trees, sustain the
-plant, even after the ground-root has been destroyed. Flower white;
-corolla tubular; stigma distant from anthers, rendering spontaneous
-fructification difficult; leaves oblong, light green, fleshy, with an
-exceedingly acrid juice; flowers in spikes, very large, fleshy and
-generally fragrant. The fruit is a pod-like, fleshy capsule, opening
-along the side. The ripe bean is cylindrical, about nine inches in
-length, and less than half an inch thick. It is gathered before it is
-entirely ripe, and dried in the shade. It contains within its tough
-pericarp a soft black pulp, in which many minute seeds are imbedded. The
-plant is cultivated by cuttings. In Mexico and South American countries,
-the insects effect impregnation; in Tahiti, this is done artificially.
-With a small, sharp stick the pollen is conveyed to the stigma of the
-pistil. Artificial impregnation of fifteen hundred flowers is considered
-a good day's work. Allusion has been made elsewhere to the fact that the
-shrewd Chinamen have depreciated the vanilla industry in Tahiti and
-ruined the reputation of the product. If the natives could be induced to
-stop their dealings with the scheming Chinese merchants and traders, and
-the government would release them from export duty, the cultivation of
-vanilla would soon regain its former importance and would yield a very
-profitable income. The Tahitians are not agriculturists; they are averse
-to hard manual labor; they are
-
- Of proud-lived loiterers, that never sow,
-
- Nor put a plant in earth, nor use a plough.
-
- CHAPMAN.
-
-and hence are anxious to obtain what little money they need with as
-little effort as possible. Vanilla, once planted, requires very little
-attention, and it grows most luxuriantly in the dark shadow of the dense
-forest, where the natives engaged in artificial impregnation of the
-flower and in gathering the bean are protected against the direct heat
-of the sun. The great advantage of vanilla-cultivation to the island
-consists in the fact that this valuable article of commerce can be grown
-without deforestation, so essential in the cultivation of much less
-valuable products of the soil of the tropics.
-
-
-
-THE RURAL DISTRICTS
-
-Papeete is not the place to study the natives, their habits and customs,
-as European influence and example have here largely effaced the
-simplicity and charms of native life. The rural districts are the places
-for the tourist to get glimpses of real native life. He will find there
-the best specimens of natives, and an opportunity to study their
-primitive methods of living. There is no other island of similar size
-where the traveler will find it so easy to visit all of the rural
-districts and villages. By following the ninety-mile drive, he can
-encircle the entire island in a comfortable carriage, and finish the
-trip in four days, if his time is limited, and in doing so he sees the
-inhabited part of the island and nearly all of the villages. He will see
-on this trip Paea Grotto and cave, also picnic-grounds, eighteen miles
-from Papeete, Papara, six miles further, is noted for native singing,
-chanting and dancing. The real Tahitian life is met at Pari and Tautira.
-On the other side of the island, the road skirts along the coast and
-ascends five hundred feet above the level of the sea. The drive is a
-charming one, as the traveler never loses the sight of mountains and
-hills, and only very seldom, and at long intervals, of the blue Pacific
-Ocean. In some places the road-bed is cut through solid rock, and for a
-few moments the panoramic view of the magnificent scenery is shut out
-from sight, but on the other side of the cut a picture more beautiful
-than ever is unrolled. The ocean claims the first attention as it smiles
-in the dazzling sunshine beneath where
-
- The murmuring surge,
-
- That on th' unnumber'd idle pebbles chafes.
-
- Can not be heard so high.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-In the distance we can see the foam-crested waves dash over the coral
-reef in their attempts to reach the placid waters of the peaceful
-lagoon, where the wavelets play with the pebbles on the shore. Looking
-toward the left, we again are face to face with the mountains, that are
-our constant companions, on the entire route. There is a feeling of
-solemnity which takes possession of the soul when communing with Nature
-in her grandest mood, and we begin to feel that
-
- I live not myself, but I become
-
- Portion of that around me; and to me
-
- High mountains are a feeling; but the hum
-
- Of human cities, torture.
-
- BYRON.
-
-We see the naked mountain-peaks and the bare backs of the foot-hills.
-
- Rock-ribbed, and ancient as the sun.
-
- BRYANT.
-
-We pass through magnificent groves of cocoa-palms, and now the road
-leads through a primeval forest with an impenetrable jungle on its
-floor, where
-
- The winds within the quiv'ring branches play'd,
-
- And dancing trees a mournful music made.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-We pass through or near the quaint native villages peopled with naked
-children, scantily dressed women, and men whose only garment consists of
-a much-checkered, many-colored calico loin-cloth. We cross rivers,
-brooks and rivulets without number, and looking for their source we see
-glimpses, here and there, of cascades and cataracts, high up on the
-mountainside, in the form of streaks of silver in the clefts of the deep
-green ocean of trees. We see butterflies by the hundreds, of all colors,
-playing in the sunshine or eagerly devouring the nectar of the sweetest
-flowers. We admire the richness and variety of the floral kingdom, and
-inhale the perfume of the fragrant flowers, suspended in the pure air
-and wafted to us by the cool land breeze sent down from the top of the
-mountains. As the sun approaches the horizon, and the short, bewitching
-twilight sets in, with the gorgeous display of colors in the sky and the
-wonderful effects of light and shadow on sea and shore, we can realize
-that
-
- Softly the evening came. The sun from the western horizon
-
- Like a magician extended his golden wand o'er the landscape;
-
- Twinkling vapors arose; and sky, and water, and forest.
-
- Seemed all on fire at the touch, and melted and mingled together.
-
- LONGFELLOW.
-
-The vistas and views along this circular drive are infinite; the
-surprises at every turn without number. No matter how much the visitor
-may have traveled, even if he has seen the whole world outside of this
-blessed island, he will see here many things he has never seen before.
-Every step brings new revelations of the beauty and goodness of Nature
-and her tender care for man. What a paradise for lovers of nature, for
-poets and artists! Here is a place above all others in the world, where
-
- No tears
-
- Dim the sweet look that Nature wears.
-
- LONGFELLOW.
-
-The further the visitor wends his way from Papeete, the more he will
-find the natives in their natural state, and the less contaminated by
-European influence. On the opposite side of the island, at Pari, the
-people have preserved their native customs, and live now about in the
-same manner as when Wallis discovered the island. Religion and
-civilization have liberated them from ancient barbarities, but have had
-little influence in changing their customs, for
-
- Custom has an ascendency over the understanding.
-
- DR. I. WATTS.
-
-All of the villages scattered at short intervals along the ninety-mile
-drive are small; the largest with not more than five hundred
-inhabitants. In Papeete, and between it and Papara, the natives live in
-small frame houses, built on piling several feet above the ground,
-covered with a roof of corrugated iron, and made more spacious and
-comfortable by a veranda facing the road. Few native houses are
-encountered on this part of the journey. Beyond Papara they are the
-rule, and these retain their primitive charm. They are built of upright
-sticks of bamboo, lashed side by side to a frame of stripped poles in
-the form of an oval. Upon this is a heavy roof of pandanus thatch
-covering a cool, well-ventilated, sanitary home. The air circulates
-freely through the open spaces between the poles, as well as between the
-two doorways on opposite sides of the house. Mats take the place of a
-floor.
-
-
-
-Cooking is done outside without the use of a stove. The native oven is a
-very simple affair, as it consists of a layer of stones upon which a
-fire is built. When heated to the requisite degree—and this is a matter
-the experienced housewife must determine—the food is placed amid the
-embers, wrapped in pieces of banana leaves and covered over with piles
-of damp breadfruit leaves. Breadfruit, taro, green bananas and
-plantains, are the articles of food prepared in this way. The roasting
-of a pig, the favorite meat of the South Sea Islanders, is a more
-complicated process, and to do it well requires much experience. A hole
-is dug in the ground and paved with stones, upon which a fire is built.
-When the stones are thoroughly heated and the fire exhausted or
-extinguished, the whole animal, properly prepared and wrapped in leaves,
-is placed in the pit, covered with damp leaves and loose earth. On great
-festive occasions, fowl and fish are added to the contents of the pit.
-The pork, fowl and fish cooked in this manner are delicious, and the
-slightly smoky taste only adds to their savoriness. It is the pride of
-the cook to remove the roasted pig without mutilation, usually a very
-delicate task. Chicken, boiled in the milk of the cocoanut, is another
-masterpiece of native cookery. The cocoanut is prepared in many ways for
-the table and a sauce made of the compressed juice of the grated nut,
-mixed with lime juice and sea-water, makes a most palatable sauce for
-meats and fish.
-
-House-building and housekeeping are free from care and never ruffle the
-family peace. If a young couple desire to establish a home of their own,
-they signify their intentions to their friends and neighbors. These
-gather, usually Sunday afternoon at two o'clock, at the place selected
-for the new home, bring bamboo sticks, poles and pandanus leaves, and at
-sundown the house is ready for occupation. The pandanus roof does
-efficient service for about seven years, when it has to be removed and
-replaced by a new one. The bamboo framework, properly protected, lasts
-for a much longer time. As the whole house consists of a single oval
-room, is floorless and not encumbered by furniture of any kind, the
-house-wife has an easy existence, more especially as the children can
-not outwear their clothing, and their husband's loin-cloths need no
-repairs.
-
-While meat in Tahiti is scarce, every family has an easy access to a
-rich fish-supply. The fish which swarm in the lagoons and outside of the
-reefs furnish an easily secured food-supply. They are caught in
-different ways—by hook or netting—and not the least picturesque way is
-the torchlight fishing on the lagoon. Torches are improvised of long
-cocoa-palm leaves tied into rolls. With a boat-load of these, together
-with nets and spears, the fishermen in their canoes paddle out upon the
-water after dark. Flying fish, attracted by the light, shoot overhead
-and are dexterously caught in a hand-net. Other kinds of fish, by aid of
-the light, are speared over the side of the canoe. _Dolphin_ and bonita,
-the latter a favorite fish, are taken with the hook and line, in larger
-canoes sailing on the open sea, but this kind of fishing is left to a
-few hardy men. The women scoop up small river-fish in baskets, and
-drag-nets are used in capturing the many varieties of small fish of the
-lagoon. While the fish are being cooked in the underground oven, some
-member of the family goes into the adjacent forest and in a short time
-returns with breadfruit, and a variety of fruits, to make up a dainty
-and substantial repast.
-
-The island is divided into seventeen districts and each district has its
-own chief, who is entrusted with the local government. The chiefs are
-elected by popular vote every few years, the office being no longer
-hereditary. The chief resides in the principal village of his district
-and here is to be invariably found a government school, a Protestant and
-a Catholic church with its respective parochial school, and a
-meeting-house which serves as a gathering-place for the annual native
-plays and on all occasions of public concern. A daily mail supplies the
-rural population with the news of the island and keeps them in touch
-with the outside world. Abject poverty in the city and country is
-unknown, and begging is looked upon as a disgrace. There is neither
-wealth nor poverty in Tahiti. The people have all they need and all they
-desire, and
-
- Poor and content is rich, and rich enough.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-I am quite sure that the tourist who has tasted freely of modern life
-such as it now is in our large cities, with all its cares and
-temptations, all its unrealness and disappointments, when he has seen
-the happy, contented, free-from-care Tahitians, in their charming island
-and simple homes, will be willing to confess:
-
- For my part, I should prefer to be always poor, in blessings such as
- these.
-
- HORATIUS.
-
-and
-
- Everything that exceeds the bounds of moderation has an unstable
- foundation.
-
- SENECA.
-
-
-
-POINT VENUS
-
-Every visitor to Tahiti should visit Point Venus, as it is a historic
-place near where the Europeans made their first landings in Matavai Bay,
-and where the first white settlers cast their lot with the natives. It
-is in this neighborhood where the English missionaries established their
-permanent home and from here spread the new tidings of the gospel over
-the entire island. They labored in vain for nearly twenty years, when
-all at once a religious wave swept over the island which resulted in the
-speedy Christianization of almost the entire population. I have already
-referred to Point Venus as the place where the government lighthouse is
-located and where Captain Cook had his headquarters when he and the
-scientists who accompanied him observed the transit of Venus by order of
-the English government in the year 1769. The place where the scientific
-observations were made is marked by a modest monument of stone
-surrounded by an iron railing, on which are inscribed the data
-commemorative of the work accomplished. Close by this monument, on the
-most prominent point, has been erected the lighthouse which guides the
-mariner in approaching the island during the night. The distance from
-Papeete to Point Venus is seven miles, over a macadamized road which we
-found in a somewhat neglected condition. Two native villages, Pirae and
-Arue, are passed on the way, and a third, Haapape, is close by. The road
-leads through groves of cocoa-palms, primeval forests and jungles, and a
-part of it skirts the foot-hills of the towering mountains. Most of the
-time the beautiful lagoon, dotted here and there with fishermen's
-canoes, is in sight. The calmness of the air, the solemnity of the
-surroundings and the sight of these canoes on the unruffled lagoon,
-reminded us of
-
- Low stir of leaves and dip of oars
-
- And lapsing waves on quiet shores.
-
- WHITTIER.
-
-Some of the more daring fishermen we saw outside of the reef, in the
-same frail crafts, battling with a rougher sea, but the skilled use of
-their very primitive paddles kept the canoes in good motion and steady,
-and it seemed
-
- She walks the waters like a thing of life,
-
- And seems to dare the elements to strife,
-
- BYRON.
-
-Matavai Bay, which the road follows for a considerable distance, is a
-beautiful sheet of water. It was in this bay that the ships of the early
-voyagers found a resting-place, and where on its shore the first white
-men touched the soil of Tahiti and came face to face with a people who
-had never heard of a world outside of the islands of the Pacific. The
-scenery all along this drive is truly tropical. The floral wealth is
-great and its variety endless. It was on this drive I found the
-passion-flower in full bloom and exquisite beauty.
-
-Near Point Venus we met a gang of natives, in charge of the chief of the
-district, engaged in repairing the road. All except the chief were in
-loin-cloths as their only article of dress. They worked leisurely, and
-smoked and chatted in a way that showed that they were happy even when
-bearing the burden of the day and the scorching rays of the tropic sun,
-with nothing in view for their ten-o'clock breakfast but the cool
-mountain water instead of coffee, breadfruit or plantain (_fei_) for
-bread, and some fruit gathered in the woods on their way to work.
-
-The round trip from Papeete to Point Venus can be made in three hours,
-and gives one a very excellent idea of the general topography of the
-island and is replete with both pleasure and profit.
-
-FAUTAHUA VALLEY
-
-The next interesting short drive from Papeete is to the Fautahua Valley,
-distance four miles. It is noted for delightful river scenery and tropic
-vegetation, and at the end of the valley is a beautiful waterfall. This
-charming valley, with its typical tropic scenery enclosed by towering
-mountains and resounding with the rippling, dashing music of a turbulent
-mountain stream and the babbling and murmuring of the many brooks and
-rivulets of pure crystal water which feed it, is well worth a visit.
-This valley was once densely populated, if we can judge from the
-abundance of imported fruit trees and the coffee shrub which now
-flourish in the forest unaided by the care of man, while, at the present
-time, the native huts are few and far apart. Wild arrowroot grows here
-in profusion, and a variety of exogenous shade trees have become an
-important component part of the primeval forest, rendered almost
-impenetrable by vines and a dense undergrowth. A carriage-road extends
-to Fashoda Bridge, well up in the mountains, beyond which it leads up
-the gorge, past a waterfall which leaps over a rocky rim, where the
-mountains join to the bed of the stream, six hundred feet below. In
-different places the romantic mountain road is spanned by graceful
-arches of branches of the pauru tree, ambitious to find on the opposite
-side of the road an independent existence from the parent tree. One of
-the large, quiet pools below the Fashoda Bridge, a favorite
-bathing-place for women and their daughters, has been made famous by the
-writings of Pierre Loti, a French author.
-
-From Fashoda Bridge a bridle path leads up a very steep incline to the
-French military post in the very heart of the mountains, six thousand
-feet above the level of the sea. It was here that the natives made their
-last stand in their war with France. A little beyond the fort rise the
-crags which compose "the Diadem," a conspicuous landmark in the
-mountains of Tahiti.
-
-The view from Fashoda Bridge in all directions is inspiring: at the end
-of the gorge the waterfall dashing over the volcanic rock, pulverized at
-many points in its descent into silvery spray; the tree-clad mountains
-on each side with their steeples of bare rock; beneath, the wild
-mountain stream, speeding to find rest in the quiet basin below; and all
-around, the rank vegetation which only the tropics under the most
-favorable conditions can grow, and above, the clear blue sky,
-brilliantly illuminated by the morning sun. As late as nine o'clock in
-the forenoon we found everything bathed in a heavy dew, which added much
-to the beauty and freshness of the incomparable scenery.
-
-Near the bridge, leading a pack-mule, we met a soldier on his way to the
-city for supplies for the small garrison in charge of the fort. Military
-duty at this lone isolated station must certainly prove monotonous, as
-from the bridge the only way to reach the fort is either on foot or
-mule-back. The quietude of this peaceful valley, at the time of our
-visit, was disturbed by a large force of native laborers who were laying
-the pipes for the new city waterworks.
-
-
-
-VILLAGE OF PAPARA
-
-The village of Papara, the largest in the island, has been the
-acknowledged stronghold of the Tevas for centuries. Here the powerful
-chiefs of the clan have ruled their subjects with an inborn sense of
-justice until their jurisdiction and, power were curtailed by foreign
-intervention. For a long time the ruling house of the Tevas dominated
-the social and political life of the island. It was at Papara that the
-largest and most imposing marae was built, consisting of a huge pile of
-stones in the form of a truncated cone, the ruins of which still remain
-as a silent reminder of the political power of the Tevas lone before the
-white man cast his greedy eyes upon this island paradise.
-
-The district of Papara, of which the village of about five hundred
-inhabitants is the seat of the local government, is the most fertile and
-prosperous of all the seventeen districts into which the island is at
-present divided. Tati Salmon, son of Ariitaimai, the famed chiefess and
-historian of the island, is the present chief. He was educated in
-London, is highly respected by the foreigners and natives alike, and
-owns about one-third of the island. He lives in a charming old-fashioned
-house, the original part of which was built more than a century ago. The
-house is situated at the mouth of a large mountain stream, and faces the
-broad lagoon hemmed in by a coral reef, over which the surf dashes from
-day to day and from year to year with the same regularity, with the same
-splashing and moaning sounds of the waves as they leap from the restless
-ocean beyond into the peaceful bosom of the calm lagoon.
-
-Papara, like all of the native villages, is located on the circular road
-familiarly known as the ninety-mile drive. The road from Papeete to
-Papara, a distance of twenty miles, leads through the most picturesque
-and interesting part of the island. The road is a genuine chaussee,
-constructed at great expense by the French government, and is kept in
-excellent repair. For the most part it follows the coast in full view of
-the lagoon and the ocean beyond, and, for more than one-half of the
-distance, the smaller volcanic sister island, Moorea, is in sight. The
-mountains are constantly in sight, ceaselessly changing in their aspects
-with distance and change of perspective. The narrow strip of coast-land
-is covered with a thick layer of the most productive soil upon a
-foundation of rock and red volcanic earth. Vegetation everywhere is
-rampant and extends from the very edge of the lagoon to the naked
-pinnacles of the mountains. In many places the road skirts the
-foot-hills, and at different points the precipitous mountains rise from
-the bed of the lagoon, where the road-bed had to be made by blasting
-away a part of their firm foundation of volcanic stone.
-
-The traveler on the whole trip is never without the companionship of the
-branchless, slender, graceful cocoa-palms, with their terminal crown of
-giant leaves, clusters of blossoms, and nuts of all sizes and stages of
-maturity. A stately forest of cocoa-palms like those found on the coast
-of Tahiti is a sight that can not fail to interest and fascinate the
-Northerner fresh from zero weather, snow and ice. The straight, columnar
-trunks, with their sail-like terminal fronds and clusters of fruit in
-all stages of development from the blossom to the golden yellow of the
-ripe nut, are objects of study and admiration which create in the
-visitor a strong and lasting attachment for the tropics. There is no
-other spot on the globe where the tourist can see larger and more
-beautiful palm forests than on the circular road between Papeete and
-Papara. The cocoa-palm is queen here, as there is no other tree among
-its many neighbors that has succeeded in equaling it in height. The
-lofty, proud head of the palm has no competitor; it is alone in that
-stratum of air and looks down upon the plebeian trees beneath with a
-sense of superiority, if not of scorn. For miles this road passes
-through magnificent forests of cocoa-palms, with a heavy undergrowth of
-guava, extending from the shore high up the foot-hills and
-mountainsides. The cocoa-palm is fond of salt water and thrives best
-when its innumerable slender, long roots can imbibe it from the briny
-shore.
-
-The pandanus tree is even more partial to a soil impregnated with salt
-water. On this drive this tree is frequently seen, and in preference at
-the very brink of the coast, with the butt-end of the trunk high in the
-air, resting on a colonnade of numerous powerful, slightly diverging
-roots. Another tree omnipresent on this drive is the pauru tree, with
-its large leaves and charming cream-yellow, salver-shaped flowers. This
-tree loves the dark, shady jungles, where its tortuous branches mingle
-freely with the dense undergrowth and climbing plants.
-
-The views that present themselves on this drive at every turn are simply
-bewitching and vary with every curve of the road. The gentle ocean
-breeze that fans the flushed face of the raptured traveler is lost when
-the road leaves the coast and plunges into a primeval forest, when
-
- Gradual sinks the breeze
-
- Into a perfect calm; that not a breath
-
- Is heard to quiver through the closing wood.
-
- THOMSON.
-
-
-
-As the carriage emerges from the dark shades of the forest into the
-dazzling sunlight in full view of the near-by ocean again.
-
- The winds, with wonder whist,
-
- Smoothly the waters kiss'd,
-
- Whispering new joys to the mild ocean.
-
- MILTON.
-
-Every turn of the wheel on this winding road brings new delights. The
-views of mountains and ocean, the strange trees and flowers, the
-childlike natives and their dusky, naked children, the quaint villages,
-the turbulent mountain streams and the diminutive cataracts and
-waterfalls, framed in emerald green on the mountain-sides, enchant the
-eye and stimulate the mind every moment. These little waterfalls have
-excavated the hardest rocks and have chiseled out, in the course of
-centuries, crevices and caves of the strangest designs.
-
-The floral wealth of Tahiti is immense. Mr. McDaniel, of Los Angeles,
-Cal., during a several-months' visit to the island, analyzed and
-classified two thousand different kinds of plants. Some of the flowers
-are gorgeous, others yield a sweet perfume which is diffused through the
-pure air, imparting to it the balmy character for which it has become
-famous. An acquaintance with these flowers suggests:
-
- Were I, O God, in churchless lands remaining,
-
- Far from all voice of teachers or divines,
-
- My soul would find, in flowers of thy ordaining,
-
- Priests, sermons, shrines.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-At a sudden turn of the road a vista is disclosed that defies
-description. In the open roadway, brilliantly illuminated by the noonday
-sun, in the distance, a flame-tree, with its flowers of fire, dazzles
-the eyes, and its grandeur and beauty increase as we approach it, while,
-in a few moments, what appeared as an apparition is behind us, and the
-tension of vision is relieved by a long, restful look over the limitless
-expanse of the blue sea. I have seen the flame-tree in different
-countries, but the sight of this one, with its magic surroundings, made
-a picture of exquisite beauty which forcibly recalled the lines:
-
- The spreading branches made a goodly show,
-
- And full of opening blooms was ev'ry bough.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-The numerous villages of land-crabs met on this drive afford amusement
-for the stranger, unfamiliar with this inhabitant of the coast in the
-tropics. The land-crabs have evidently a well-organized government in
-each community. Among the most important officials are the sentinels,
-who are always on duty, when the inhabitants of the village have left
-their underground habitations, to give timely notice of impending
-danger. With the approach of man, the whole colony is on the alert. As a
-matter of safety, the land-crab does not stray far away from its
-subterranean home. When these animals are out in the open they are never
-caught napping. Their large, exophthalmic eyes are never idle, and the
-instant danger threatens they speed to their place of safety. If you
-have enough patience to wait, you will find, sooner or later, two large
-staring eyes on a level with the hole where the animal disappeared. The
-land-crab is cautious, constantly on the lookout, and, on the first
-signal of danger, makes a rush for his or somebody else's hole.
-
-A short distance from Papeete is a truck garden managed by Chinamen.
-This enterprise, the only one I noticed on the drive, demonstrates well
-what the soil of Tahiti is capable of producing in the way of growing
-vegetables. It is an ideal vegetable garden, weedless, and verdant with
-all kinds of vegetables. The foreign population of the city is supplied
-from here with lettuce, asparagus, cabbage, sweet potatoes, carrots,
-onions, turnips and melons of the choicest quality. The natives have no
-use for vegetables and make no attempts to raise them for the market.
-The guava shrub is found everywhere. It has infested the country,
-weed-like, and its golden fruit is not appreciated by the natives; only
-a very small part of the fruit is gathered for making jelly, one of the
-few articles of export.
-
-This is the part of the island where the vanilla-bean is most
-extensively cultivated. A vanilla plantation is a jungle in which the
-bean thrives best. In the thick woods all along the road, the climbing
-bean is seen trailing up the shrubs and trees, often to a height of
-twenty feet. At the time of my visit the blossoms had disappeared and
-the green beans had reached a length of about four inches, half their
-length when they are ripe. A patient and prolonged search made for a
-flower was finally rewarded by the finding of a belated bud which, on
-being placed in water, expanded into a flower during the night,
-affording me an opportunity to study its anatomy.
-
-Three small villages, Faaa, Punaauia and Paea, are passed on the way
-from Papeete to Papara, and, like all other villages, each of them had
-its own government school, a Catholic and a Protestant church, and,
-connected with these, two parochial schools. The compulsory education
-introduced into the island applies to children from six to sixteen years
-of age. The churches are well attended, but I was informed by a German,
-who has resided in Tahiti for thirty years, that the people attend
-service more as a matter of amusement than with any intention of
-obtaining spiritual benefit.
-
-Nearly all of the village shops are kept by Chinamen, and it is needless
-to say that these shrewd foreigners take undue advantage of the simple,
-trusting natives, in all of their business transactions. Much of the
-hard-earned money of the natives finds its way into the capacious
-pockets of these enterprising Orientals.
-
-We reached Papara toward evening, and, when we came in sight of the
-chiefery, were deeply impressed with the beauty of the location. Palm
-trees, flowering shrubs and garden flowers adorn the spacious grounds in
-front and all around the ancient mansion which is perched on an elevated
-plateau adjoining the large and beautiful stream of crystal mountain
-water, and facing the placid lagoon. An immense double war-canoe was at
-anchor in the river. It is now used as a fishing-boat by one of the sons
-of the chief, when he desires to catch the bonita outside of the lagoon.
-It takes seven men to manage this giant canoe, by means of paddles.
-
-In front of the wide veranda of the one-story house is an ornamental
-tree which spreads its branches at least twenty feet in all directions.
-As it was in full bloom at the time of my visit, it added much to the
-beauty and comfort of the immediate surroundings in front of the house.
-
-The rooms of the mansion are large, and brimful of local antiquities and
-old furniture imported from Europe, which impart to them a coziness and
-charm which have been greatly appreciated and gratefully remembered by
-many a welcome visitor. It is in a house like this, presided over by the
-chief of Papara and his charming family, that one can experience what
-genuine, unselfish hospitality means.
-
-Twelve servants, men and women, take care of the house, the family and
-the visitors. Most of these were born on the place, and some of them,
-very old now, were in the service of the grandfather of the present
-chief. The relation between master and servants in this house is a very
-pleasant one. The servants are looked upon and treated rather as
-relatives than employes. Their pay is small, but they are given all the
-comforts of a home.
-
-Word had been sent ahead from Papeete announcing our visit, for the
-purpose of securing for us the rare pleasure of partaking of a genuine
-native dinner. A little pig was roasted underground, and chickens were
-boiled in the milk of the cocoanut, exquisite dishes, which, with
-excellent coffee, French bread, and a variety of luscious tropical
-fruit, made up a dinner which it would be impossible to duplicate in any
-of the large cities of the continents.
-
-The village of Papara is a most interesting place to visit. Besides the
-magnificent scenery, one finds here many native huts, and the town hall
-is a large, airy structure, built of bamboo sticks and covered with a
-thatched roof. Near the village are the grotto and cave, which enjoy a
-local reputation, and are well worth seeing by the visitor.
-
- The sun's rim dips; the stars rush out:
-
- At one stride conies the dark;
-
- With far-heard whisper o'er the sea;
-
- Off shot the spectre bark.
-
- COLERIDGE.
-
-The day had been hot and sultry. From a cloudless sky, the tropical sun
-shot down, without mercy, his arrows of heat, against which the lightest
-and most porous headdress, umbrella, roof and shade afforded but
-inadequate protection. Man and beast were listless, perspiring, careful
-to make no unnecessary exertion. The green, succulent foliage bowed
-under the oppressive heat, and even the gayest of the flowers drooped
-their proud heads in homage to the fierce king of the serene blue sky.
-The very atmosphere quivered in convulsive movements, and the intense
-light, reflected from the surface of the sleeping ocean and the white
-city, dazzled and blinded those who ventured to go out into the streets.
-The little capital city of Papeete, nestled on the plateau between the
-harbor and the foot of towering mountains, half hidden among the tropic
-trees, was at rest; market and streets deserted, business houses closed,
-and the wharf silent and lifeless. The numerous miserable curs in the
-streets sought shelter in the shade, lying in a position affording most
-perfect relaxation, with protruded, blue, saliva-covered tongues,
-fighting the heat by increasing the respiratory movements to the utmost
-speed. The numerous half-wild pigs in the streets, with paralyzed tails
-and relaxed bristles, buried themselves as deeply as possible in the
-nearest mud-pool, and with eyes closed, submitted passively to the fiery
-rays of the midday sun. The roaming chickens, from bald chicks a few
-days old to the ruffled, fatless veterans of questionable age, suspended
-their search for rare particles of food with which to satisfy their
-torturing sense of hunger, and simply squatted where the heat overcame
-them, in the nearest shady place, there to spend the enforced siesta
-with bills wide open and the dry, blue tongues agitated by the rapid and
-violent breathing. The birds of the air ceased their frolic; their song
-was silenced, and they took refuge in trees with thickest foliage. Men,
-women and children, rich and poor, merchant and laborer, were forced to
-suspend work and play, and seek, in the shadow of their homes or near-by
-trees, protection against the onslaught of the burning rays of the sun.
-Such is the victory of the sun of the tropics. He demands unconditional
-surrender on the part of every living thing. He knows no compromise, as
-he is sure of victory as long as his victim is in a favorable strategic
-position. This was the case on the day of which I speak. As the rays of
-the sun became more and more oblique, and the invisible great fan of the
-land-breeze was set in motion, wafting down from the high mountain peaks
-a current of cool air, the city woke up from its midday slumber. The sun
-had lost his fiery power. He was retreating from the field of combat,
-and approaching in the distance the rim of the placid ocean. The monarch
-of the day, so near his cool, watery couch, laid aside his mask of fire
-and smiled upon the vanishing world with a face beaming with happiness
-and peace.
-
- The sun was set, and Vesper, to supply
-
- His absent beams, had lighted up the sky.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
- It was an evening bright and still
-
- As ever blush'd on wave or bower,
-
- Smiling from heaven, as if naught ill
-
- Could happen in so sweet an hour.
-
- MOORE.
-
-The last act of the retiring monarch of the day revealed his
-incomparable skill as a painter. He showed discretion in the selection
-of the time to demonstrate to the best advantage his matchless artistic
-skill. He chose the evening hour, when the soul is best prepared to take
-flight from earthly to heavenly things. He waited until man and beast
-had laid aside the burden and cares of the day, and were in a receptive,
-contemplative mood to study and appreciate the paintings suspended from
-the paling blue dome of the sky.
-
-He waited until he could hide himself from view behind the bank of
-fleecy clouds moving lazily in the same direction. Then he grasped the
-invisible palette charged with colors and tints of colors unknown to the
-artists of this world, and seized the mystic, gigantic brush when
-
- The setting sun, and music at the close.
-
- As the last taste of sweets is sweeted last,
-
- Writ in remembrance more than things long past.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-The time for this magic work was short. The moment the passing clouds
-veiled his face it began. From the very beginning it became apparent
-that the hidden artist exhibited superhuman skill. The most appreciative
-and scrutinizing of his admirers felt powerless to comprehend and much
-more to give a description of the panoramic views which he painted with
-such rapid succession on the sky, clouds and the dull surface of the
-dreamy, listless ocean. With intense interest we watched the constantly
-varying, artistic display, felt keenly the shortcomings of human art,
-and realized, to the fullest extent, the force and truth of
-
- Who hath not proved how feebly words essay
-
- To fix one spark of beauty's heavenly ray.
-
- BYRON.
-
-
-
-All painters place the greatest importance upon a proper background for
-their pictures in order to give light and shade a strong expression. So
-does the sun. With a few strokes of the magic brush, the deep blue of
-the horizon was wiped out and replaced by the palest shade of blue, so
-as to bring forth, in bolder relief, the resplendent colors on the
-moving canvas of the clouds. The artist fringed the margins of the
-clouds with delicate lace of shining gold. Through clefts and rents in
-the clouds the smiling face of the painter peeped upon the beautiful
-evening beyond. His work had only begun. In rapid turns the clouds were
-converted into a sheet of gold with a violet border that deepened into a
-vivid crimson hue. As the artist disappeared, inch by inch, under the
-limitless expanse of the ocean, he wiped out the brilliant colors on the
-canvas of clouds, and gilded the horizon with a sheet of gold, deepening
-his favorite color, yellow, into an orange hue, which remained unchanged
-until the approaching darkness threw a drapery of sombre black over the
-inspiring scene. Twilight shuns the tropics. Day lapses into night
-almost imperceptibly, and, with the setting of the sun, the earth is
-wrapped in darkness. There is no compromise in the tropics, between the
-rulers of day and night. With the disappearance of the last rays of the
-sun, the pale blue dome of the sky is decorated with millions of
-flickering stars, casting their feeble light upon land and sea through
-the immeasurable ethereal medium which separates heaven from earth.
-
- The sun has lost his rage; his downward orb
-
- Shoots nothing now but animating warmth
-
- And vital lustre.
-
- THOMSON.
-
-On the evening of which I speak, the short twilight foreshadowed the
-appearance of the heavenly advance-guard proclaiming the coming of the
-Queen of Night.
-
- When the evening King gave place to night,
-
- His beams he to his royal brother lent,
-
- And so shone still in his reflected light.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-Looking in the direction opposite from where the monarch of the day had
-disappeared, the cloudless sky brightened over the bare gray
-mountain-peak, and the stars, in joyful anticipation of the approaching
-event, abandoned their stoic immobility and trembled in feverish
-excitement. An impressive silence reigned in the little city, broken now
-and then by the almost noiseless footsteps of half-naked, barefoot
-natives, or the clattering of the hoofs of a horse and humming of the
-wheels of a passing cart, and, once or twice, by the whirr of the only
-automobile in the island, steered by an enterprising, prosperous French
-merchant.
-
-Nature awoke from her noonday slumber, the glossy leaves resumed their
-natural shape and freshness, the drooping flowers revived, expanded and
-exhaled their fragrance, perfuming the evening air. The birds had found
-shelter and protection for the night in the leafy domes of the many
-beautiful shade and ornamental trees. It was solemn eveningtide, when
-the heart of man is most receptive for noble and pure impressions. It
-was the time to turn away the thoughts from the busy, selfish world and
-reflect upon the wonders of creation. It was the time to look upward to
-the calm, pale, blue sky, feebly illuminated by the soft light of
-countless tiny lamps suspended by invisible cords from the limitless
-space above. It was the time to look beyond earthly things. It was the
-time to understand:
-
- The beauty of the world and the orderly arrangement of everything
- celestial makes us confess that there is an excellent and eternal
- nature, which ought to be worshiped and admired by all mankind.
-
- CICERO.
-
-We were speechless spectators of the passing and coming. Our thoughts
-were turned to the invisible hand that created the earth we inhabit and
-all of the heavenly bodies, and which directs their movements with
-infallible precision and unfailing regularity. We thought of things
-incomprehensible to man, of things far beyond the grasp of the human
-mind, of things known only to the Almighty Lord, Creator of all things
-in heaven and earth.
-
-With our eyes fixed on the gateway of entrance of the Queen of Night, we
-patiently awaited her arrival, anxious, however, to catch the first
-glimpse of her beautiful face. No blare of trumpets or bugle call
-announced her approach. She rose in the sky silently, resplendent in her
-own magic beauty, and her charms are always sweetest when the nights are
-calm and peaceful. She combined beauty with two of the most attractive
-feminine virtues—modesty and gentleness. As we watched her regal
-entrance into the sky, the golden arch assumed the deep yellow hue of
-the precious metal it resembled, and, in a few moments, the pale rim of
-her sweet face rose over the dark, bald mountain-peak, and ascended
-slowly and majestically, higher and higher, away from earthly things, on
-her journey through the pathless sky. This evening she appeared in
-perfect glory, permitting us to look into her full, calm face. Her
-consort, the sun, had just disappeared, leaving behind him a golden
-crescent on the opposite horizon. She was following his pathway and had
-taken possession of his throne for the night. The departing sun and the
-ascending moon were in strange and pleasing contrast at the threshold of
-that beautiful night.
-
- O! belle nuit! mit preferable au jour!
-
- Premier nuit a amour consacree!
-
- En sa faveur, prolonge ta duree,
-
- Et du soleil retarde le retour.
-
- DE MALFILATRE.
-
-The moon loves to reign in peace and quietude. She abhors the tumult of
-the battle-field and the struggles of man for wealth and honor. She is
-the friend of the wounded, the sick and the poor; and the guardian angel
-of all those in need of repose. As she ascended heavenward, the rippling
-ocean became a great mirror, a mirror worthy to reflect her beautiful
-face. The soft, pale light streaming out from the silvery orb cast
-phantom-like shadows in the forests, parks and streets. Solemnity
-reigned supreme.
-
- On seas, on earth, and all that in them dwell,
-
- A death-like and deep silence fell.
-
- WALLER.
-
-Happy the people who respect and love the Queen of Night and her reign
-of peace and rest! Charming Queen! Retard your journey, prolong your
-peaceful mission for the well-being of your loyal subjects so much in
-need of your calming influence and of your soft, soothing light! To such
-petitions the goddess of the sky has only one inflexible reply: "The
-universe is my kingdom, the earth you live in is only one of my smallest
-possessions. I must remain loyal to all of my realms."
-
-
-
-This evening in Tahiti had another and still more sublime entertainment
-in store for us, a spectacle which can be seen in perfection only in the
-tropics, and, I imagine, Tahiti is the stage more perfect than any other
-in the world for the display of one of nature's grandest exhibitions.
-The soft light of the rising moon and the myriads of tiny, flickering
-stars furnished the illumination; the mountains, forests, harbor and
-ocean, the stage. We were roused from our reverie by distant peals of
-thunder. Looking in the direction whence these reports came, we saw
-black, angry clouds hovering about the mountain-peaks to the south and
-east of Papeete. The clouds were too heavy for the rarified mountain air
-and soon began to descend slowly but steadily until they wrapped the
-towering summits in a cloak of sombre black. The mountain-peaks, which
-but a short time before were caressed by the gentle, silvery light of
-the moon, were now completely obscured. Where did these clouds come
-from? No one could tell. No one could mistake their movements. They
-appeared to have had only one object in view, and that was to embrace
-the mountain-range well below the tree-line. Smaller clouds, fragments
-from the main mass, moving more swiftly in the evening air, impelled by
-the land-breeze, floated away from the dark wall enveloping the
-mountainsides, which seemed to possess some subtle, magnetic power
-buried in the Immense piles of volcanic rocks. At short intervals, great
-zigzag chains of lightning shot through these dark clouds, momentarily
-lighting up the dark, unbroken, primeval forest. These dazzling,
-blinding flashes of lightning were in strong contrast with the soft,
-tropic moonshine that remained outside of the limits of the aerial sea
-of clouds, which had commenced to discharge a drenching rain. Fleecy
-little wandering clouds now flecked the horizon, strangely and variously
-painted by the moonlight, shortly before the midnight hour. Through
-fissures in these fleeting, snowy clouds, the moon and stars often
-peeped at the grand spectacle which was being enacted on the stage
-below. Lightning and thunder came nearer and nearer with the approach of
-the weeping mass of clouds. The bolts of lightning must have found their
-marks with unerring precision in the crags and forest underneath the
-roof of dense clouds, as from there came at short intervals deafening
-peals of thunder reverberating through the calm evening air far out over
-the surface of the sleeping ocean, where the reverberations died out in
-a faint rumbling.
-
-This majestic but awesome sight was of short duration. The pouring rain
-relieved the clouds of their abnormal weight, and, balloon-like, they
-rose, clearing the mountain-range, which then again made its appearance
-in the soft, bewitching moonlight of the tropics. Lightning and thunder
-retreated with the disappearance of the clouds. The atmosphere was cool
-and refreshing, purified by the pouring rain and the furious electric
-storm. At this stage of the nightly display in our immediate vicinity,
-in front of the veranda of the little hotel, in full view of the now
-deserted stage, from the clear, cloudless sky, gigantic drops of rain
-fell, sparkling in the magic moonlight like diamonds that had become
-loosened and had fallen from the jeweled crown of the Queen of Night,
-whose throne had then reached the zenith of the horizon.
-
-Instead of wishing for an encore after such a brilliant act given by
-nature's artists, we took one more and last look at the serene, smiling,
-full face of the moon, and were then prepared to acknowledge reverently:
-
- What else is nature but God, and divine reason, residing in the whole
- world and its parts.
-
- SENECA.
-
-IORANA!
-
-The South Sea Islanders have beautiful words of welcome with which they
-meet the stranger. The Samoan greets you with _talofa_; the Hawaiian, with
-a clear, musical voice, welcomes you with _aloha nui_; and the Tahitian,
-with an open, friendly face and a smile, when he meets you, addresses
-you with that beautiful greeting, _iorana_. These euphonious words mean
-more than the words of our language intended for the same purpose; they
-come from the heart and are addressed to the heart much more so than our
-"Welcome," "How do you do?" "How are you?" or "I am glad to see you."
-These Polynesian words are not only words of welcome, but carry with
-them the best wishes of the natives for the stranger; they signify not
-only a formality, but also express a sincerity which is so often lacking
-in our conventional meetings with friends and strangers. The visitor who
-remains long enough in Tahiti to become acquainted with the natives will
-find that their greeting, _iorana_, is verified by their actions. The
-natives, educated and ignorant, young and old, are polite, friendly and
-hospitable to a fault. They are fond of making little gifts to
-strangers, and if these are reciprocated, they are really and honestly
-grateful. The people are charming, the island beautiful, and nature's
-storehouse never empty of the choicest that the sea can supply and the
-soil can produce. Any one who has seen Tahiti, the Island Paradise, on
-leaving it, and ever after, in recalling his experiences and
-observations in this island of peace, rest, charms and pleasures, will
-give expression to his feelings by repeating to himself.
-
- Isle of Beauty!
-
- Absence makes the heart grow fonder:
-
- Isle of Beauty, fare thee well!
-
- BAYLY.
-
-THE END
-
-ADDENDA
-
- TAHITI
-
- The waves that touch thy pebbly beach
-
- With soft, caressing hand;
-
- The scented breezes winging past
-
- Above thy favored land;
-
- The brilliant flowers, the glowing fruits,
-
- Close to thy bosom pressed,
-
- All, all are singing one sweet song,
-
- Whose soft refrain is, Rest!
-
- The sunset brush that tints thy skies
-
- With wondrous, varied rays;
-
- The birds that fill thy woodland haunts
-
- With music's roundelays;
-
- The sparkling streams meandering through
-
- Thy valleys ever blest.
-
- All, all are breathing one sweet song.
-
- Whose soft refrain is, Rest!
-
- The twilight hour that floods the soul
-
- With waves of perfect calm.
-
- Then gives us to the Queen of Night,
-
- Who pours her soothing balm;
-
- The still lagoon with coral reefs
-
- Where beauty makes its nest.
-
- All, all are breathing one sweet song.
-
- Whose soft refrain is, Rest!
-
- O Isle of Beauty! poets may
-
- Dip pens in wells of light,
-
- Or soar aloft on Fancy's wings
-
- In wild, aerial flight;
-
- But they can never voice thy charms,
-
- O Island of the Blest!
-
- Whose very air is perfumed with
-
- The fragrance rare of Rest!
-
- O Isle of Beauty! artists may
-
- Coax every varied hue,
-
- To lay upon the canvas wide
-
- A portrait true of you;
-
- But till they borrow heaven's power
-
- To paint thee. Island Blest,
-
- The task is vain, O Land of Peace,
-
- Whose every breeze sings Rest!
-
- Where man knows all the blissful charm
-
- Of care-free, deep content;
-
- Where life seems one long holiday
-
- In childish gladness spent;
-
- Where earth and air and sea and sky
-
- So close to God seem pressed;
-
- Ah, loath am I to turn from thee.
-
- Dear Land of Perfect Rest!
-
- MARY E. GRIFFIN.
-
-
-
-THE STORY OF ARIITAIMAI OF TAHITI[1]
-
- I wish peace, and any terms prefer
-
- Before the last extremities of war.
-
- DRYDEN.
-
-In one of the far-off isles of the South Seas, in the garden-spot of the
-Pacific, in golden Tahiti, about the year 1848, when Victoria was a
-young queen and mother, when France was in the throes of a second
-revolution, when the United States, a young republic, was still on trial
-before the old world, there was enacted one of the most touching dramas
-history has ever recorded, and this among a people considered savages by
-the so-called civilized world, and almost unknown until discovered
-through the missionary fervor of a few priests. The place, a small
-island, only a speck on the map; the _dramatis personæ_, France, England
-and America, the hereditary chiefs of a people who for forty generations
-had known no other rulers, a weak, vacillating native queen, and a
-noble-hearted native woman who knew how to be at the same time a loyal
-subject, a skilled diplomat, and that rarer and more beautiful thing, a
-faithful friend. If you would hear a story of friendship pure and
-undefiled, listen to the story of Ariitaimai of Papara, a Tahitian of
-noble birth, a child of Nature in its wildest and grandest aspect,
-rocked in a gigantic cradle of sea, sky and towering mountains, in a
-land of palm forests, where Nature has provided everything necessary to
-the life of her children, and where the pearls are the purest. If Cicero
-had known the story of Ariitaimai he would not have written in _De
-Amicitia_: "But where will you find one who will not prefer to
-friendship, public honors and power, one who will prefer the advancement
-of his friend in public office to his own? For human nature is too weak
-to despise power." But to understand this thrilling and eventful drama,
-we must listen first to the chorus reciting something of the history of
-this strange people, and of the position of woman in a land where
-suffrage societies are unknown, and where the story of the inequality of
-the sexes had never been told by book or priest. Tahiti, Matea and
-Moorea are known as the Windward Islands of the Society Group in the
-South Seas. The Leeward Islands comprise the four kingdoms, Huahine,
-Borabora, Raiatea and Tahaa, together with some smaller islands, and are
-about one hundred and twenty miles from Tahiti. But it has always been
-in Tahiti, the gem of the Pacific, that the interest has been centered,
-and it was here that the struggle took place between the English and the
-French for supremacy in the South Seas.
-
-It was in 1769 that Captain Cook entered Matavai Bay on his first voyage
-to observe the transit of Venus. This spot is marked by a stone monument
-and has been known ever since as Point Venus. At this time Cook
-estimated the number of inhabitants at two hundred thousand. To-day,
-after the long contention between the French and English for supremacy,
-after the brave struggle of the natives against both for independence,
-after all the ravages made by the diseases introduced by foreigners, and
-after years of a fearful mortality caused by the enervating effect of
-civilization upon a people suited only to be children of Nature, this
-goodly number has been reduced to a pitiful eleven thousand. In fact,
-our so-called nineteenth century civilization has succeeded in
-practically exterminating a people who could produce a pearl among
-womankind, a rare and tender soul, such an one as English history does
-not give us, and France has produced but one, her own Jeanne D'Arc.
-
-The government of the island has always been by chiefs and chiefesses,
-no distinction of sex being made in laws of inheritance, the eldest born
-inheriting the rank and estates and all the authority which the title of
-chief conveys. Many of the chiefesses appear to have been exceedingly
-warlike, true Amazons, contending with neighboring chiefs for more
-authority and extensive possessions. Even as wives of the chiefs, women
-went to war to help fight the battles of their husbands and clans. It is
-reported of one of the Pomares who was of a peaceful disposition that in
-one hotly contested encounter he fled to a neighboring island, leaving
-his wife Iddeah to face the storm. History says that she was a great
-warrior and carried the contest to a successful issue for her husband
-and their possessions. It is recorded of another chief that he was not a
-warrior and left the active campaigning to his wife. So it will be seen
-that in the political life of Tahiti sex was not considered. Accident of
-birth settled the title, and the warlike spirit miade the warrior,
-whether it resided in chief or chiefess. England took a hand in the
-island politics at a time when one of the weakest and most unpopular
-chiefs was warring for the supremacy, and by assisting and upholding his
-authority prolonged one of the most disastrous wars in the history of
-Tahiti. The Tahitians detested tyranny and the insolence of a single
-ruler, and in their tribal system of chiefs had a protection against
-despotism which the foreigners, by their advocacy of the cause of a
-special chief, afterwards Pomare I., destroyed.
-
-Before the invasion of the English, the hereditary chief of each
-district held absolute sway in his own province. Questions of common
-interest were settled in the island councils by majority vote, and it
-was in these deliberations that the chiefs of Papara had for generations
-held the balance of political power. Politically, the change was
-disastrous. In olden times whenever a single chief became arrogant and
-threatened to destroy the rest, all the others united to overthrow him
-and thus re-established the political equilibrium.
-
-Ariitaimai belonged to the Clan of Tevas, of the chiefery of Papara, and
-the family of Tati. She belonged to the clan which was ruled by Opuhara,
-the last of the heathen chiefs who went down in the conflict with Pomare
-II., who with the help of English guns was made absolute monarch of the
-island. This conflict between Opuhara and the English, because Pomare
-was only an instrument in their hands to accomplish the conquest of the
-island, is responsible for the bitter hatred of the genuine natives for
-the foreigners and the missionaries.
-
-Opuhara was considered the greatest warrior and hero of the Tevas, and
-his death, the result of a stratagem on the part of Pomare and the
-English missionaries, is considered by his people a veritable
-assassination. He fell by a shot fired by a native missionary convert.
-Tati, one of the under-chiefs of Papara, had been persuaded by the
-English to approach Opuhara to negotiate with him for submission. But
-Opuhara turned on him with scorn. "Go, traitor," he said; "shame on you!
-you, whom I knew as my eldest brother, I know no more; and to-day I call
-this my spear, 'Ourihere,' brotherless. Beware of it, for if it meet you
-hereafter, it meets you as a foe. I, Opuhara, have stood as Arii in Mona
-Temaiti, bowing to no other Gods but those of my fathers. There I shall
-stand to the end; and never shall I bow to Pomara or to the Gods forced
-on us by the white-faced man." With Opuhara perished the last hope of
-the native patriots to preserve a government of chiefs. His dying words
-were all that was left to his clan of the glory and power of Papara. "My
-children, fight to the last! It is noon, and I, Opuhara, the _ti_ of Mona
-Temaiti, am broken asunder!" He fell a martyr to his belief in the
-heathen gods, and in the ancient inherited rights of his people: a
-tribal government. His followers have always firmly believed that
-Opuhara would have won the contest had not the missionaries brought
-their guns along with their Bibles.
-
-It was this belief that Ariitaimai inherited with the beautiful lands of
-Papara. She says in her memoirs: "I am told that Opuhara's spear,
-'Brotherless Ourihere,' is now in the Museum of the Louvre. Even in
-those days there were among all his warriors only two who could wield
-it. If the missionaries have sometimes doubted whether the natives
-rightly understood the truths and blessings of Christianity, perhaps one
-reason may be that the Tevas remember how the missionaries fought for
-Pomare and killed Opuhara."
-
-Marama, the mother of Ariitaimai, was a celebrated chiefess in her own
-right, the sole heir of Marama, the head chief of Moorea, the nearest
-island to Tahiti. She was a great heiress, and the last representative
-of the sacred families of these two islands. She was given in marriage,
-as a political compromise and at the special request of King Pomare, to
-Tati's son, the head chief of Tahiti. It was also agreed that all issue
-of the marriage should become the adopted children of Pomare, according
-to an ancient Tahitian custom. The family is a great institution in
-Tahiti and any one whose parents both by birth and adoption had been
-carried to the family Marae with offerings to the gods, enjoyed a rare
-social distinction. This Ariitaimai could claim, so from her birth she
-was looked upon by the islanders as an especially favored and
-much-to-be-treasured maiden. It may be that this great respect shown
-towards her by the entire people did much to mold her character. The
-Tahitian mother has little to say in regard to the training of her
-first-born, as this one is considered to belong to the family as a
-whole, and all questions of general interest are settled in family
-council. And so it was with Ariitaimai. She saw little of her mother,
-but was in constant touch with the family chiefs from whom, no doubt,
-she learned lessons in diplomacy, and from listening to their councils
-she acquired that rare good judgment which fitted her later to be the
-accepted advisor of her teachers. She mastered both the French and the
-English languages, and her memoirs show a wonderful knowledge of the
-literature of both countries, as well as a wide and comprehensive
-reading of classical authors. While Ariitaimai was growing to womanhood,
-the pride and special care of the chiefs of Papara, another maiden was
-receiving equal care and attention on a neighboring island. Aimata of
-Raiatea, the daughter of Pomare II., was only nine years old when her
-father died and she was given into the care of the head chief Uata, who
-was a good and learned man.
-
-
-
-These two young girls who were destined to play such an important rôle
-in the history of their country, grew up under much the same influences
-and developed characters as widely different as the antipodes. They saw
-each other only occasionally until Aimata's mother sent one day for
-Ariitaimai to make a long visit at the royal castle, as was the custom
-among the islanders, as Pomare had claimed her as his adopted daughter
-according to the ante-natal contract. Here blossomed and grew the
-friendship which was destined later to save to Pomare IV. her throne,
-and to deliver Tahiti from a war which could only have resulted in the
-extermination of the native population and the destruction of the island
-as an independent government. The real struggle between France and
-England for the possession of the island began in 1836, when two French
-priests landed at Tahiti to convert not the pagans to Christianity but
-Protestant Christians to the Roman faith. Aimata now become Pomare IV.,
-promptly ordered their arrest and expulsion. The French priests made a
-protest to their government and Louis Philippe sent a frigate to
-Papeete, the harbor city, with an ultimatum, and the Queen was obliged
-to yield. The English consul and the missionaries contested the
-occupation of the French, and another frigate was sent to Tahiti. Queen
-Pomare now appealed to Queen Victoria and offered to submit to a British
-protectorate. She also sent a protest to the government of the United
-States, against allowing the French to forcibly occupy Tahiti. But the
-English Queen was busy with more important home affairs, and neglected
-the appeal from the little island so far away, and the protest to the
-United States was apparently ignored. By a lack of appreciation of the
-Queen's communication, the United States lost the control of the gem of
-all the Pacific isles, and lost also a rare opportunity to aid and
-protect a brave people in their struggle for independence. This attitude
-of England and the United States left the contest to be settled between
-the natives and the French. After a desultory war lasting over four
-long, miserable years, with the advantage first on one side and then on
-the other, the French government decided to end the matter and sent two
-frigates to the island. The government had offered previously to this to
-place Pomare permanently on the throne under a French protectorate, but
-she would not consent to this, looking constantly for help from the
-English who had done so much for her father. So she left Tahiti, the
-scene of the contest, and fled to Raiatea to her own family for
-protection, while waiting for the help which never came.
-
-Ariitaimai, in her own beautiful home at Papara, pondered over the
-wretched state of her beloved country and her heart was sore both for
-her idolized friend and poor bleeding Tahiti. Was there no way out of
-this Slough of Despond into which the foreigners had plunged her unhappy
-country? She knew the temper of the island chiefs and that they had
-sworn to die fighting for the independence of their country. She
-remembered the fate of Tati, who had been branded a traitor with
-Opuhara's last breath because he counseled submission to the English,
-and she dared not propose to them any compromising measures. She looked
-out despairingly over the trackless sea, and appealingly up at the
-towering mountains which had been her companions during prosperity and
-adversity, but no answer came to her anxious questionings. Then
-suddenly, one day, word was brought to her by an old woman of her clan
-that two French frigates had landed in the harbor of Tahiti. She knew
-this meant the end, unless Queen Pomare could be persuaded to return to
-Tahiti and accept the offer of the French. The old crone who had brought
-her the news said to her: "Don't you know that you are the first in the
-Island, and that it remains in your hands to save all this and your
-land?" Then Ariitaimai hesitated no longer, but hastened to the governor
-and told him what she had heard. He replied: "You have heard the truth.
-The colonel commanding the troops has heard of so many instances of
-insult given to the French that we have decided at last to go out and
-finish up the affair." This brusque answer aroused in Ariitaimai all the
-stored-up energy of years. She became immediately the diplomatic
-representative of her people, and begged the governor to give her a few
-days that she might see the chiefs and make at least an effort to avert
-the terrible havoc to lives and property which this would cause.
-Ariitaimai was well known to the governor, and although evidently amused
-that a young woman should take upon herself this difficult task, readily
-consented. Like two generals they sat down and talked over all the terms
-of the peace; the governor agreeing to restore Pomare to her throne if
-she would return immediately, and to leave the chiefs in possession of
-their estates and control each of his own chiefery, all to be under the
-protection of the French flag. This, he said, they were willing to do,
-although the Queen had broken her written agreement with them, and by
-deserting her country and throne had absolved them from all obligations
-to her. Before the conclusion of the interview Ariitaimai had won the
-respect and admiration of the governor, and from that time on they
-worked together to bring about a peaceable settlement of the long and
-disastrous war. The journey which she was obliged to make in order to
-meet the chiefs in council was a long one, and while she was making her
-preparations the governor's own aid-de-camp arrived ready to accompany
-her, bringing the governor's horses and all necessary passports. She
-says in her memoirs: "I knew that my influence with the natives would be
-sufficient to save us from any trouble with them." Arrived at last at
-the principal native fort where the chiefs were assembled, her first act
-showed her the accomplished diplomat. She sent a trusty messenger for
-Nuutere, the one whose influence against peace she most feared, and who
-with the other chief, Teaatoro, practically controlled the situation.
-When he came out to see her she took him by the hand and said: "My
-object in coming here is to bring peace, and I have counted on you for
-the sake of old friendship to be my speaker in this trying instance."
-She quaintly adds: "He was very much perplexed at this," evidently not
-understanding why she could not speak for herself as she had often done
-before. But to her surprise Ariitaimai found the old chief very much
-broken in spirit and quite ready to listen to her arguments for peace,
-and she soon had his promise to speak for the acceptance of the
-governor's proposition. Human nature is very much the same the world
-over, whether encased in a brown skin or white. Nuutere called Teaatoro
-to him, and, after a hasty consultation, came over and whispered to
-Ariitaimai that Teaatoro would be all right. This practically settled
-the matter, but as in all political assemblies the usual formalities
-must be gone through with and Nuutere called upon each one of the chiefs
-for his opinion. The speakers all teemed with love and admiration for my
-heroine and I can not refrain from making some quotations. Nuutere,
-after stating the object of the meeting, called upon Teaatoro to make
-the first speech. He said: "We are all as one person in this meeting,
-and we have suffered together as brothers. We have heard what the object
-of this lone woman's visit amongst us is, solely for our good and that
-of our children. What can we say to this? We can only return her one
-answer, which is to thank her for the trouble and danger she has taken
-upon herself, for the peace she has brought, and she must return to the
-French commander with this our answer. We have been five months on the
-point of starvation. We lost a great many of our men at Tamavao. The
-best of our blood was spilled at Mahaena. At Piha-e-atata, our young men
-were slain. Our Queen left us in the midst of our troubles without the
-least sorrow for us. We have heard no more of the help which was
-promised us by Great Britain." Another chief rose and said: "Ariitaimai,
-you have flown amongst us, as it were, like the two birds of Ruataa and
-Teena. You have brought the cooling medicine of vainu into the hearts of
-the chiefs. Our hearts yearn for you and we can not in words thank you;
-you have brought us the best of all goods, which is peace. You have done
-this when you thought we were in great trouble, and ran the risk of
-losing our lives and property. Your people will prove to you in the
-future that your visit will always remain in their memory." The old
-chief of her own district turned toward Ariitaimai and said only: "As
-you are my head, my eyes, my hands and my feet, what more can I say?
-What you have decided we accept and will carry out." One dissenting
-voice only was heard, a young chief who had but lately come into his
-possessions and was anxious to distinguish himself as a warrior. He
-called out in a loud voice: "Why have you decided upon this peace so
-soon? Tahiti is not broken asunder. We could play with the French until
-we could get aid of Great Britain, who has formally promised to help us
-through in this war. I think you have all done wrong." But the young man
-had his lesson to learn and it was promptly taught him by Ariitaimai's
-spokesman. The spirit of young America is not appreciated in Tahiti,
-where reverence for age and worship of the ancestors is a vital part of
-the native pagan religion. Nuutere turned on the young man and asked:
-"Where were you, that consider yourself such a fighting man, in the
-fights which have already happened? I have never perceived you ahead of
-the others. You do not excel the youngest of our men in all of these
-battles. What are you known as in the annals of the country which allows
-you to get up and speak when your chiefs have already given the word?"
-Ariitaimai set out immediately on her return trip, this time escorted by
-ten of the chiefs. Although they made all possible haste the time had
-already expired before they reached the governor's headquarters, and
-preparations were being made to attack one of the native forts, the
-officers having concluded that her errand had been a failure. The
-governor, seeing her at a distance, rode out to meet her and helped her
-from her horse. He asked her anxiously in Tahitian, "Is it peace?" and
-she replied that it was peace and that everything was all right with the
-chiefs. He held her hand as he said with great feeling: "The Tahitians
-should never forget you; but your work is not finished. You must now go
-to Raiatea and bring us back the Queen." So Ariitaimai started on her
-second and more difficult errand. At first Queen Pomare refused to
-receive her, sending word that she was told that she had gone over to
-the French; but later she granted her an interview in which she cried
-very much, upbraiding her friend for the stand she had taken, and
-accusing her of betraying her interests to the French.
-
-The Queen then sent for the chiefs of her own family with whom she had
-taken refuge, and, after a prolonged conference, they advised her not to
-return. She said to Ariitaimai: "I trust to the word of Great Britain,
-who has promised us to send ships and men to fight our cause and to keep
-us an independent state, and I will not return and be under the French."
-So after repeated pleading poor Ariitaimai was obliged to return to the
-governor with Pomare's answer. He was much disappointed but said as the
-chiefs of Tahiti had agreed to peace and as he had nothing to do with
-the chiefs of Raiatea they must decide on another monarch, and offered
-to make Ariitaimai queen of Tahiti in Pomare's place. But this the
-faithful friend would not listen to, and begged the governor to allow
-her again to see Pomare, as she believed that when she had had time to
-think the matter over she would change her mind. To this the governor
-very reluctantly consented, as he was entirely out of patience with
-Pomare, and would much have preferred to make Ariitaimai queen, which
-could have been done with great propriety, as she was at that time the
-head chiefess of the island. After a stormy trip she arrived again at
-Raiatea and this time was fortunate enough to find her friend Aimata
-alone, the chiefs having gone to an assembly to consult over the affairs
-of their own island. This time our faithful ambassadress did not hasten
-her visit. She renewed and strengthened the ties of friendship which had
-bound them together since their early girlhood, and she records in her
-memoirs that they had a beautiful visit together before any mention was
-made of the real object of her coming. The charming way in which she
-speaks in her memoirs of Pomare's flight shows the tenderness of her
-affection for her friend. She says, calling her by her girlhood name:
-"The unfortunate Aimata had troubles of every sort, domestic, political,
-private and public, until at last the missionaries English and French,
-fought so violently for control of her and the island that she was
-fairly driven away." With all her acuteness and learning in other
-matters, she seems to have had no realization of the true character of
-the woman she so beautifully idealized. She still saw in the Queen the
-qualities she loved in the young girl, and her affection blinded her to
-the defects in her friend's character which entirely unfitted her for
-the position she occupied. Events do not move as rapidly in Tahiti as in
-America, and our young diplomat, having the governor's promise to await
-her return, took her own time. She remained with the Queen two months
-and had the satisfaction of returning home with her promise to sail for
-Tahiti as soon as her favorite schooner Ana could be made ready. But,
-before sailing, another idea took possession of the unreasonable woman
-and she sent word to the Tahitian chiefs that as the English had brought
-her to Raiatea she would return only in an English ship, and demanded
-that one be sent to fetch her.
-
-This unexpected and preposterous demand plunged poor Ariitaimai into the
-deepest grief. For the first time a note of complaint of her friend
-appears in her memoirs. The French governor laughed at the demands of
-Pomare and again offered the throne to Ariitaimai, and argued long to
-prove to her that it was her duty to accept it. Where in history is the
-woman who would not now have felt that she had exhausted all the demands
-of friendship, who would not by this time have been tempted by the
-dazzling prospect of a throne, upheld by a powerful governor who had
-become her devoted friend and admirer, to be surrounded by chiefs who
-had already accepted her leadership, and who, for years, had held her
-position among them as chief ess as a sacred trust? But no ambitious
-dreams disturbed the clear judgment of this simple-minded woman. She had
-set herself a task and her only ambition was to accomplish it. Not for
-one moment did the loyal woman waver in her devotion to her friend. She
-refused absolutely to entertain a thought of the queenship, and retired
-to her country home almost in despair. She says very simply in her
-memoirs: "We then remained at home in great trouble and did not know
-what was to be done next. The governor on several occasions offered to
-make me the sovereign of the island in place of Pomare, which, however,
-I could not entertain." It is in this simple and childlike manner she
-describes all the events in this perplexing situation. Not by one word
-does she anywhere intimate that she is doing anything extraordinary or
-praiseworthy or more than her simple duty.
-
-She was not allowed to remain long inactive. Word came to her that the
-governor and chiefs were getting very restless and impatient at the
-unsettled state of the island politics and had decided not to negotiate
-further with the Pomares; and, moreover, that a document to this effect
-had been already drawn up and practically agreed upon. This roused her
-again to see the governor; and this time Fate put a powerful weapon in
-her hands. Just as she was leaving her home an old native preacher came
-along and secretly gave her a letter from her beloved Aimata. She wrote
-that she was sorry that she had not come back when she promised, that
-she was much distressed at the news from Tahiti, that she was an unhappy
-woman and, if not too late, she would surely come back if her faithful
-friend would come for her. Happy Ariitaimai fairly flew to the governor.
-What after all if it should be too late! She had never gone to the
-governor with so much fear and trepidation, and her fears were in no way
-lessened by his reception of her request that she be allowed to go once
-more to Raiatea and make a last effort to bring back the Queen. This
-request for the first time irritated the governor toward her. He said:
-"Have you not done enough for the Pomares that you should continue to go
-down to fetch them?" and he showed her the document which she had heard
-of but which was much worse than she supposed, as it proposed to break
-up the act of protectorate that had been already made and distinctly
-stated that as Ariitalmai had refused to be made queen he would make the
-island a French colony at once. But with that precious letter in her
-bosom she would not be thwarted in her purpose, and did not leave the
-governor until she had received his very grudging permission to see
-Pomare and, if she consented to return, to take her to Moorea and let
-him know. With this she was obliged to be contented. More she could not
-accomplish without divulging the secret of her letter, and this, she
-argued, would be disloyal to her friend; for was it not a secret letter
-sent to her at great risk? No, she would accomplish her purpose without
-humiliating her Queen. Pomare should return at the request of the
-governor without losing aught of her queenly dignity.
-
-And now this little drama draws rapidly to a close. Ariitaimai made her
-third trip to Raiatea and accompanied Pomare to Moorea, and sent word to
-the governor that he would find them there. Obedient to this gently
-expressed command of his ambassadress, the governor very courteously
-went to Moorea in person to receive the Queen and bring her back to her
-home and throne. In the same dispassionate style Ariitaimai tells of the
-homeward journey: "As we all went on board a salute was fired. We sailed
-around the island, flying the protectorate flag at the fore, to inform
-the people of these islands that their Queen had returned. We then
-continued our route for Papeete and on arriving there the forts from the
-shore saluted the flag." But O! the irony of Fate! As they entered the
-harbor what a sight met the eyes of the poor Queen! Both British and
-American ships were anchored there, having come at last in answer to her
-appeals, but only in time to see her placed on her throne by the grace
-of the hated French, But peace had been bought too dearly to be broken
-now even by this vacillating queen, and the British and American
-officers, seeing the situation, had the good sense to assist in the
-general festivities celebrating the long-looked-for peace. The memoirs
-conclude with this simple statement: "The Queen remained several hours
-on board the steamer as the governor wished the natives to see that the
-Queen had really come back. There were soldiers in line on shore to
-receive us and we were conducted to the governor's house. The peace of
-the island was then decided upon. On arriving at the governor's house we
-found all the commanders of the troops and vessels there and before them
-I was thanked by Governor Bruat for what I had done for my country."
-
- When a world of men
-
- Could not prevail with all their oratory
-
- Yet hath a woman's kindness overruled.
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-[1] This chapter is the product of the fertile pen of Dr. Lucy Waite.
-Surgeon-in-Chief of the Mary Thompson Hospital, Chicago.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tahiti; the island paradise, by Nicholas Senn</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Tahiti; the island paradise</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Nicholas Senn</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 4, 2023 [eBook #69945]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: James Simmons</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TAHITI; THE ISLAND PARADISE ***</div>
-<div class="document" id="tahiti-the-island-paradise">
-<h1 class="title">TAHITI THE ISLAND PARADISE</h1>
-
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
-<div class="topic">
-<p class="topic-title">Transcriber's Note</p>
-<p>This book was transcribed from scans of the original found at the Internet Archive.
-Variant spellings are not corrected. Some illustrations are rotated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="figure align-center">
-<img alt="Book Cover" src="images/cover.jpg" style="width: 379.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image1">
-<img alt="Frontspiece: The Royal Family" src="images/Image01.jpg" style="width: 436.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-</div>
-<p align="center"><strong>TAHITI</strong></p>
-<p align="center"><strong>THE</strong></p>
-<p align="center"><strong>ISLAND PARADISE</strong></p>
-<p align="center">BY</p>
-<p align="center"><strong>NICHOLAS SENN, M. D., Ph. D., LL. D., C. M.</strong></p>
-<p align="center">Professor of Surgery in the University of Chicago</p>
-<p align="center">Professor and Head of the Surgical Department in Rush Medical College</p>
-<p align="center">Surgeon-in-Chief of St. Joseph's Hospital</p>
-<p align="center">Attending Surgeon of the Presbyterian Hospital</p>
-<p align="center">Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief of the Operating Staff with the Army in</p>
-<p align="center">the Field during the Spanish-American War</p>
-<p align="center">Surgeon-General of Illinois</p>
-<p align="center">WITH FIFTY HALF-TONE ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-<p align="center"><strong>CHICAGO</strong></p>
-<p align="center"><strong>W. B. CONKEY COMPANY</strong></p>
-<div class="figure align-center">
-<img alt="Title Page" src="images/title_page.jpg" style="width: 353.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-</div>
-<p align="center">COPYRIGHT, 1906,</p>
-<p align="center">BY</p>
-<p align="center">W. B. CONKEY COMPANY</p>
-<div class="section" id="preface">
-<h1>PREFACE</h1>
-<p>The far-away little island of Tahiti is the gem
-of the South Pacific Ocean. If any place in this
-world deserves to be called a paradise, Tahiti
-can make this claim. This charming spot in the
-wide expanse of the peaceful ocean has
-attractions which we look for in vain anywhere else.
-From a distance, the grandeur of its frowning
-cliffs rivets the eye, and, in coming nearer, its
-tropic beauty charms the visitor and imprints
-upon his memory pictures single and panoramic
-that neither distance nor time can efface. The
-scenic beauty of this island is unsurpassed. The
-calming air, redolent with the perfume of fragrant
-flowers of exquisite beauty, on the seashore, in
-the valleys and on the precipitous mountain
-sides; the luxuriant vegetation; the forest
-fruit-gardens and the sweet music of the surf remind
-one of the original habitation of man. The
-natives, a childlike people, friendly, courteous
-and hospitable, are the happiest people on earth,
-free from care and worries which in other less
-favored parts of the world make life a drudgery.</p>
-<p>Tahiti is the only place in the world where
-the people are not obliged to work. The forests
-furnish bread and fruit and the sea teems with
-fish. The climate is so mild that the wearing of
-clothing is rather a matter of choice than of
-necessity, and the bamboo huts that can be made
-with little or no expense in half a day with
-the willing help of the neighbors, meet all the
-requirements of a home. The stranger will find
-here throughout the year a climate and
-surroundings admirably adapted to calm his nervous
-system and procure repose and sleep.</p>
-<p>In writing this little book I have made free use
-of the &quot;Memoirs of Arrii Taimai E., Marama
-of Eimeo, Terii rere of Tooarai, Terii nui of
-Tahiti, Tauraatua I Amo&quot; (Paris, 1901). The
-authoress was the mother of Tati, one of the
-most influential present chiefs of Tahiti, and, as
-her several titles show, she was of noble birth.
-She was an eye-witness of many of the most
-stirring political events in the history of the
-island. Only fifty copies of this book were
-printed and only three remained in possession
-of her son. He was kind enough to give me
-one of them, which, after making liberal use
-of it, I presented to the library of the University
-of Chicago, through its late lamented president,
-Dr. W. R. Harper. I also acknowledge my
-indebtedness to the works of Captain Cook, &quot;A
-Voyage to the Pacific&quot; (London, 1784), and to
-the book of Baron Ferd. von Mueller, &quot;Select
-Extra-tropical Plants&quot; (Melbourne, 1885).</p>
-<p>N. Senn.</p>
-<p>Chicago, 1906.</p>
-<div class="contents topic" id="contents">
-<p class="topic-title">Contents</p>
-<ul class="simple">
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#preface" id="id4">PREFACE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#id1" id="id5">TAHITI THE ISLAND PARADISE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-island-of-tahiti" id="id6">THE ISLAND OF TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#ocean-voyage" id="id7">OCEAN VOYAGE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-atoll-islands" id="id8">THE ATOLL ISLANDS</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-landing-at-papeete" id="id9">THE LANDING AT PAPEETE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-city-of-papeete" id="id10">THE CITY OF PAPEETE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#topography-of-the-island" id="id11">TOPOGRAPHY OF THE ISLAND</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-climate" id="id12">THE CLIMATE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#history-of-the-island" id="id13">HISTORY OF THE ISLAND</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#pomare-the-royal-family-of-tahiti" id="id14">POMARE, THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#missionary-rule" id="id15">MISSIONARY RULE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#wars-between-protestant-and-catholic-missionaries" id="id16">WARS BETWEEN PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC MISSIONARIES</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-last-war" id="id17">THE LAST WAR</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-natives" id="id18">THE NATIVES</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#foreigners-in-tahiti" id="id19">FOREIGNERS IN TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#business-in-tahiti" id="id20">BUSINESS IN TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#old-tahiti" id="id21">OLD TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#religion-of-the-natives" id="id22">RELIGION OF THE NATIVES</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-insignia-of-tahitian-royalty" id="id23">THE INSIGNIA OF TAHITIAN ROYALTY</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#diseases-of-tahiti" id="id24">DISEASES OF TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#present-prevailing-diseases" id="id25">PRESENT PREVAILING DISEASES</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-kahuna-or-native-doctor" id="id26">THE KAHUNA OR NATIVE DOCTOR</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#physicians-in-tahiti" id="id27">PHYSICIANS IN TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#hopital-militaire" id="id28">HÔPITAL MILITAIRE</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-island-of-plenty" id="id29">THE ISLAND OF PLENTY</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#tahiti-s-natural-bread-supply" id="id30">TAHITI'S NATURAL BREAD SUPPLY</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-cocoanut-the-meat-of-the-tahitians" id="id31">THE COCOANUT, THE MEAT OF THE TAHITIANS</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-cocoa-palm" id="id32">THE COCOA-PALM</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-forests-of-tahiti" id="id33">THE FORESTS OF TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#noted-forest-trees-of-tahiti" id="id34">NOTED FOREST TREES OF TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#vanilla-cultivation-in-tahiti" id="id35">VANILLA CULTIVATION IN TAHITI</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-rural-districts" id="id36">THE RURAL DISTRICTS</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#point-venus" id="id37">POINT VENUS</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#fautahua-valley" id="id38">FAUTAHUA VALLEY</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#village-of-papara" id="id39">VILLAGE OF PAPARA</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#iorana" id="id40">IORANA!</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#addenda" id="id41">ADDENDA</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference internal" href="#the-story-of-ariitaimai-of-tahiti" id="id42">THE STORY OF ARIITAIMAI OF TAHITI </a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-<p><strong>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</strong></p>
-<ul class="simple">
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image1">The Royal Family</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image2">Harbor and Principal Port of Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image3">Lighthouse, and Cook Monument at Haapape</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image4">King Pomare V</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image5">Pomare IV</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image6">View of Moorea</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image7">Tahiti from the Harbor of Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image8">In the Shadow of the Palm Forest</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image9">The S. S. &quot;Mariposa&quot; Leaving the Harbor of Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image10">Royal Palace (Headquarters of the Governor)</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image11">Avenue of Purranuia, Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image12">Native Village by the Sea</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image13">Native Hut close by the Sea</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image14">Prince Hinoi</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image15">A Tahitian Home</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image16">Tahitian Bamboo House</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image17">Tomb of the Last King of Tahiti, Pomare V</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image18">Tahitian Women in Ancient Native Dress</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image19">Tahiti Girls in Native Dress</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image20">A Group of Native Girls</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image21">Native Girl in Modern Dress</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image22">Tahitian Ladies in Zulu Dress</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image23">Native Musicians and Native Dance</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image24">Tahitian Girl in Native Festive Dress</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image25">At Home</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image26">A Home by the Sea — Raiatea</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image27">Fisherman's Home</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image28">Native Settlement</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image29">Group of Tahitian Children</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image30">A Case of Far-Advanced Leprosy Affecting All Limbs</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image31">A Leper of Tahiti</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image32">Military Hospital in Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image33">Tahitian Fruit Vender</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image34">Preparing Breadfruit</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image35">Sapodilla</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image36">Copra Establishment</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image37">Government Wharf — Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image38">Corner in Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image39">A View of Fautahua Valley</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image40">Avenue of Fautahua</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image41">Cascade of Fautahua</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image42">Bridge across Fautahua near Waterfall</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image43">Lagoon and Reef on the Ninety-Mile Road</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image44">On the Ninety-Mile Road</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image45">Fishermen of Papeete</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image46">Tahitian Canoe with Outrigger</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image47">Two Papaya Trees</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image48">Picking Cocoanuts</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image49">Alligator Pear Tree</a></li>
-<li><a class="reference external" href="#image50">Ancient Masked Warriors</a></li>
-</ul>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image2">
-<img alt="Harbor" src="images/Image02.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 382.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">HARBOR AND PRINCIPAL PORT OF PAPEETE
-(Steamer <em>Mariposa</em> leaving the port)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="id1">
-<h1>TAHITI THE ISLAND PARADISE</h1>
-<p>When the Almighty Architect of the universe
-created the earth we inhabit, He manifested His
-wisdom, goodness and foresight in adapting, in
-a most admirable manner, the soil, climate, and
-animal and vegetable life for the habitation of
-man, the supreme work of creation. By the
-gradual and progressive geographical
-distribution of man over the surface of the earth, he
-has become habituated to diverse climates and
-environments, and has found conditions most
-congenial to his comfort and the immediate
-necessities of life.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>In cold, laborious climes, the wintry North</p>
-<p>Brings her undaunted, hardy warriors forth,</p>
-<p>In body and in mind untaught to yield,</p>
-<p>Stubborn of soul, and steady in the field;</p>
-<p>While Asia's softer climate, form'd to please.</p>
-<p>Dissolves her sons in indolence and ease.</p>
-<p>LUCANUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It required centuries for the Esquimau to
-become acclimated to the inhospitable polar regions,
-and make them his favorite abode; the people
-who drifted toward the equator gradually
-became inured to the climate of the tropics and
-accustomed to the manner of living in countries
-where the perennial heat paralyzes the physical
-and mental energies, and undermines the health
-of strangers coming from a more temperate
-climate. Nature has made ample provision for
-man in all habitable parts of the earth. The
-regions of ice and snow are inhabited by
-fur-bearing animals, and, at certain seasons of the
-year, are frequented by a large variety of aquatic
-birds in great abundance, which supply the natives
-with food and clothing, while in the tropics, man
-has little or no need of fuel and clothing, and,
-with very little exertion, he can subsist on the
-fruits of the forests, and on the food so liberally
-supplied by the sea.</p>
-<p>The intensity of the struggle for life increases
-with the distance north and south from the
-temperate zones, where climatic conditions
-necessitate active exercise and where the necessities of
-life can only be obtained by the hardest kind of
-labor. The climate of the tropics, on the other
-hand, is very generous to man. The forests are
-rich in fruit yielding trees which Nature plants,
-which receive little or no care, yet which bear
-fruit throughout the year. Wherever the
-cocoa-palm grows in abundance, there can be no famine,
-because this tree yields a rich harvest of nutritious
-fruit from one end of the year to the other
-without fail, as it is never affected to any considerable
-extent by drouth and other conditions which so
-often bring failure to the orchards in more
-temperate climates. The continuous summer and the
-wonderful fertility of the soil in tropic and
-subtropic countries reward richly the labor of the
-husbandman by two and sometimes three
-harvests a year, as nature's forces require no rest, no
-slumber there.</p>
-<p>Life in a changeable, severe climate is full of
-hardships; in the tropics, of ease and leisure. The
-nearer we come to the tropics, the closer we
-approach the conditions of primitive man. The
-necessities of life increase as we recede on either
-side of the equatorial line. The dreamy, easy,
-care-free life in the tropics is in strong contrast
-with the severe and arduous struggles for
-existence in countries less favored by the resources
-of nature.</p>
-<p>Among the trees in the Garden of Eden, the
-palm tree was undoubtedly the most beautiful,
-and it remains to-day the queen of the forests of
-the seacoast in the tropics. The palm-clad isles
-of the South Sea bear a closer resemblance to the
-description of the Garden of Eden than any other
-of the many parts of the world that I have ever
-seen; and of these, Tahiti is a real paradise on
-earth. There is no country nor other isle where
-Nature has been so liberal in the distribution of
-her gifts. No other island can compare in natural
-beauty with Tahiti, the gem of the South Pacific
-Ocean. It is the island where life is free of care.
-It is the island where the natives are fed, clothed
-and housed by nature. It is the island where man
-is born, eats his daily bread without being forced
-to labor, sleeps and dreams away his life free from
-worry, and enjoys the foretaste of the eternal
-paradise before he dies. It is the island which
-must have been born</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>In the morning of the world,</p>
-<p>When earth was nigher heaven than now.</p>
-<p>BROWNING.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It is the island of which the poet must have
-been musing when he wrote:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Amid an isle around whose rocky shore</p>
-<p>The forests murmur and the surges roar,</p>
-<p>A goddess guards in her enchanted dome.</p>
-<p>POPE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-island-of-tahiti">
-<h1>THE ISLAND OF TAHITI</h1>
-<p>About three thousand six hundred miles south
-by southwest from San Francisco are the Society
-Islands, a small archipelago in the South Pacific
-Ocean, in latitude 16 to 18 degrees south,
-longitude 148 to 155 degrees west. Captain Cook
-named this group in honor of the Royal Society
-of London. The largest two of these islands,
-Tahiti and Moorea, are of volcanic origin,
-mountainous and heavily timbered; the remaining
-islands are small, low, of coral origin, and are
-called atolls. In approaching the archipelago
-from San Francisco, a few of these palm-fringed
-atoll islands come first into view, forming a
-pleasing foreground to the rugged mountains of
-Tahiti and its smaller neighbor, Moorea, which
-are sighted almost at the same time. After a
-voyage over the desert ocean of thirteen days
-(all this time out of sight of land), to gaze on
-the most beautiful islands of this group is a
-source of exquisite pleasure.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Sea-girt isles,</p>
-<p>That like to rich and various gems, inlay</p>
-<p>The unadorned bosom of the deep.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The South Pacific Ocean is the natural home
-of the coral polyps, which are great
-island-builders, using the volcanic material as a
-foundation for the coral superstructure. As these
-minute builders can live only in shallow water,
-they use submerged mountain peaks for their
-foundations, converting them into low atolls, and
-building reefs around the base of the high
-volcanic islands. Most of the Society Islands are
-of coral formation perched upon submerged
-mountain summits. The island of Tahiti is small,
-of little commercial interest, and hence it is
-comparatively unknown to the masses of the people.
-Very few who left the schoolroom twenty-five
-years ago would be able to locate it without
-consulting a geography, and many have even
-forgotten the name. The children fresh from school
-recall it in connection with the difficulty they
-encountered in finding the little dot in the great,
-trackless South Pacific Ocean, surrounded by a
-group of still smaller specks, representing the
-remainder of the little archipelago to which it
-belongs.</p>
-<p>Tahiti is nearly four thousand miles distant
-from San Francisco, in a southwesterly direction,
-below the equator, in latitude 17, hence in a
-similar latitude to that of the Hawaiian Islands,
-which are situated about the same distance north
-of the equator.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image3">
-<img alt="Lighthouse" src="images/Image03.jpg" style="width: 344.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">LIGHTHOUSE AND COOK MONUMENT AT HAAPAPE</p>
-</div>
-<p>I had heard much of the natural beauty of
-this far-off island and its interesting inhabitants,
-and decided to spend my midwinter vacation in
-1904 in paying it a visit. Formerly the passage
-from San Francisco had to be made by a
-schooner, and required several months. For
-the last four years the island has been made
-readily accessible by a regular steamer service.
-The staunch steamer, <em>Mariposa</em>, of the Oceanic
-Steamship Company of San Francisco, sails from
-that port every thirty-six days, makes the trip in
-twelve or thirteen days, and remains at Papeete,
-the capital of the island, four days, which give
-the visitor ample time to visit the most interesting
-points and make the desired observations. The
-track of the steamer is over that part of the
-Pacific Ocean which is comparatively free from
-violent storms, between the storm centers east
-and west from it. The prevailing trade-winds
-cool off the tropical heat in the vicinity of the
-equator, rendering the voyage at all seasons of
-the year a pleasant one. The steamer has a
-tonnage of three thousand tons, the service is
-excellent, and the table all that could be desired. I
-know of no better way to spend a short
-mid-winter vacation than a trip to Tahiti, the island
-paradise, the most interesting and beautiful of all
-islands.</p>
-<p>January and February are the months when
-the fruit is most abundant, and the climate most
-agreeable. The twenty-five days of voyage on
-the ocean, the few days on shore occupied by a
-study of its natives, their customs, manner of
-living, by visits to the various points of historic
-interest, and by the greatest of all genuine
-pleasures, the contemplation of nature's choicest
-exhibitions in the tropics, are all admirably adapted to
-procure physical rest and pleasure, and pleasing
-as well as profitable mental occupation. A trip to
-Tahiti will prove of particular benefit to those
-who are in need of mental rest. The absence of
-anything like severe storms on this trip should be
-a special inducement, for those who are subject
-to seasickness, to travel there.</p>
-<p>The steamer is well adapted for service in the
-tropics, the cabins are roomy and comfortable.
-Capt. J. Rennie is one of the most experienced
-commanders of the fleet, a good disciplinarian
-and devoted to the safety and comfort of his
-passengers. While the steamer can accommodate
-seventy cabin passengers, the number seldom
-exceeds twenty-five. The tourist therefore
-escapes crowding and noise, so trying to the
-nerves, and so common on the transatlantic
-steamers and other more frequented ocean routes.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="ocean-voyage">
-<h1>OCEAN VOYAGE</h1>
-<p>The steamer <em>Mariposa</em> leaves the San Francisco
-wharf at eleven o'clock a. m.,—an excellent time
-for the passengers to enjoy the beauties of the
-bay and the Golden Gate, to see the rugged coast
-of California gradually disappear in the distance
-during the course of the afternoon, and to prepare
-himself for the first night's sleep in the cradle
-of the deep. The second day out, and until the
-mountains of Tahiti come in sight, the traveler
-will see nothing but the floating tavern in which
-he lives, its inmates, the inky blue ocean, the sky,
-clouds, and, occasionally, sea-gulls, and isolated
-schools of flying fish. The steamer's track is
-over an unfrequented part of the ocean. The
-passenger looks in vain for a mast or
-white-winged sails, or puffs of smoke in the distance,
-sights so often seen on more frequented ocean
-highways. The steamer crosses an ocean desert
-little known, but out of reach of the violent
-storms, so frequent near the coasts, on both sides
-free from reefs and rocks, as this part of the
-ocean is of unusual depth, amounting in many
-places to three miles. Stranding of the vessel,
-or collision with others, the greatest dangers
-incident to sea travel, are therefore reduced to a
-minimum on this route. Although this course is
-an unusually lonely one, the interested observer
-will find much to see and enjoy. The vast
-expanse of the ocean impresses the traveler from
-day to day and grows upon him as the distance
-from the coast increases.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Illimitable ocean! without bound,</p>
-<p>Without dimensions, where length, breadth, and height,</p>
-<p>And time, and place, are lost</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The boundless ocean desert, mirror-like when
-at rest, clothed by gentle ripples and ceaseless
-wavelets when fanned by the trade-winds, is a
-picture of peace and contentment.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The winds with wonder whist,</p>
-<p>Smoothly the waters kiss'd,</p>
-<p>Whispering new joys to the mild ocean.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>But even here in the most peaceful part of the
-Pacific, when angered by the fury of a heavy
-squall, a diminutive storm agitates the waters into
-foam-crested waves, which, for a short time at
-least, impart to the ship an intoxicated gait. The
-effect of sun, moon and starlight on the smooth,
-undulating, heaving, billowing, tossing,
-storm-beaten surface of the ocean, is marvelous. When
-all is quiet, and the passenger is only conscious of
-the vibratory movements imparted to the ship by
-the ceaseless action of the faithful screw, and the
-lights of heaven are veiled by a curtain of dark
-clouds, the beautiful blue gives way to a sombre
-black. When the tropic sun shines with all his
-force, the color of the water fairly vies with the
-deep blue of the sky, and the nearer we approach
-our destination, the tints of blue grow deeper and
-deeper, until at last they are of perfect indigo.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image4">
-<img alt="KING POMARE V." src="images/Image04.jpg" style="width: 388.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">KING POMARE V.</p>
-</div>
-<p>The moon and starlight have a magic effect on
-the surface of the water. The long evenings give
-the passengers the exquisite pleasure of watching
-the journey of the moon across the starlit
-heavenly dome, growing, night after night, from a mere
-sickle to her full majestic size, and of observing
-the effects of the gradually increasing intensity of
-the light issuing from the welcome visitor of the
-night, on the glassy mirror of water beneath.
-The star-bedecked pale dome of the tropic sky
-is, in itself, a picture that rivets the attention of
-the traveler who loves and studies the book of
-nature. The short twilight over, &quot;these blessed
-candles of the night&quot; (Shakespeare) are lighted,
-and send their feeble light down upon the bosom
-of the ocean.</p>
-<p>If the sky is clear, the illuminating power of
-the moon at its best, and the ocean calm, its
-surface is transformed into a boundless sheet of
-silver. This magic effect of moonlight on the
-surface of the sleeping ocean is magnified by
-passing fleecy, or dark, storm-threatening clouds.
-The fleeting, fleecy clouds often veil, only in part,
-the lovely, full face of the moon, and through
-fissures, the rays of light issue, and, falling upon
-the water, are reflected in the form of silvery
-patches or pathways, corresponding in size and
-outline with the temporary window in the passing
-cloud. It is when the moon is about to be hidden
-behind a dark, impenetrable veil that the
-spectator may expect to see the most wonderful
-display of pictures above and around him. As the
-cloud approaches the moon, the blue background
-deepens in color and brilliancy and when its dark
-margin touches the rim of the moon it is changed
-into a fringe of gold or silver; with the
-disappearance of the moon behind the cloud the fringe of
-the latter is rudely torn away, the water beneath
-is robbed of its carpet of silver, and the
-captivated observer is made aware that the darkness
-of night is upon him. But the gloom is of short
-duration. A break in the cloud serves as a
-window through which the moon peeps down,
-with a most bewitching grace, upon the dark
-surface beneath. The prelude to this exhibition
-appears on the side of the temporary frame, in
-the form of a silver lining which broadens with
-the moving cloud; now the rim of the moon
-comes into view; slowly, the veil is completely
-thrown aside, and Luna's calm, pale, smiling, full
-face makes its appearance, enclosed in a dark
-frame with silver margins, while, more than
-likely, she will be attended by a few brilliant
-stars, thus completing the charms and beauty
-of the picture suspended from the heavenly
-dome. All genuine pleasures of this world are
-of short duration; so with this nocturnal picture
-painted on the clouds and water. The silver rim
-on one side of the frame of clouds disappears, the
-dark margin increases in width, the moon is
-obscured, and only a few flickering stars remain
-fixed in the picture.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Surely there is something in the unruffled calm of
-nature that overcomes our little anxieties and doubts:
-the sight of the deep blue sky, and the clustering stars
-above, seem to impart a quiet to the mind.</p>
-<p>JONATHAN EDWARDS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In midocean is the place to view at greatest
-advantage the gorgeous sunrise and sunset of the
-tropics. To see the sun disappear in the distance,
-where the dome of the sky seems to rest on the
-bosom of the ocean, is a scene which no pen can
-describe, and which no artist's brush has ever
-reproduced in any degree comparable with the
-grand reality. The canvas of the sky behind the
-setting glowing orb, and the passing clouds in
-front, above, and beneath it, are painted
-successively by the invisible brush in the unseen hands
-of the departing artist in colors and shades of
-colors that may well laugh to scorn any and all
-attempts at description or reproduction. The
-gilded horizon serves as a fitting background for
-the retreating monarch of the day, and the slowly
-moving canvas of clouds transmits his last
-messages in all the hues of red, crimson, pink, and
-yellow. To observe this immense panorama
-stretched from north to south, and projected
-toward the east, resting on the silvery surface of
-the rippling ocean, with the ever-varying colors
-of the slowly moving clouds, as seen evening
-after evening on the Tahitian trip, leaves
-impressions which time can not erase from memory.</p>
-<p>Night on board the <em>Mariposa</em> has additional
-attractions for the passengers who appreciate the
-wonders and beauties of nature. When the night
-is dark, they find a place in the stern of the ship,
-lean against the taffrail, and watch the water
-agitated into a diminutive storm by the powerful
-screw. There one beholds a sight sufficiently
-attractive and interesting to keep him spellbound
-for an hour or more. The indolent,
-phosphorescent sea-amoeba has been roused into action by
-the merciless revolutions of the motor of the ship,
-and emits its diamond sparks of phosphorescent
-light. Thousands of these little beings discharge
-their magic light in the white veil of foam which
-adorns the crests of the storm-beaten surface, in
-the form of a narrow track as far as the eye can
-reach in the darkness of the night. The flashes
-of light thrown off by these minute, to the naked
-eye invisible, inhabitants of the sea, when angered
-by the rude action of the screw, appear and
-disappear in the twinkling of an eye. When these
-tiny, light-producing animals are numerous, as
-is the case in the equatorial region, the
-snow-white veil of foam is richly decorated with
-diamond sparks which, when they coalesce, form
-flames of fire in the track of the vessel.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image5">
-<img alt="POMARE IV." src="images/Image05.jpg" style="width: 377.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">POMARE IV.
-The Queen of the Story of Ariitaimai of Tahiti</p>
-</div>
-<p>The ocean voyage has occasionally still another
-surprise in store for the traveler when he reaches
-the South Pacific. A squall is a tempest on a
-small scale. We see in the distance a dark cloud
-of immense size which seems to ride slowly over
-the surface of the smooth sea. The gentle breeze
-gives way to a strong wind, the surface of the
-water becomes ruffled with whitecaps, the
-darkness increases, and at irregular intervals the
-threatening, angry cloud is lighted up by chains
-of lightning thrown in all possible directions;
-these flashes are followed by peals of thunder, and
-by prolonged rumbling, which becomes feebler
-and feebler, and finally dies away far out on the
-surface of the ocean. The steamer penetrates the
-storm area. Darkness prevails. Gigantic drops
-of rain strike the deck and patter upon the canvas
-awning, the harbingers of a drenching rain.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>And now the thick'ned sky</p>
-<p>Like a dark ceiling stood; down rush'd the rain impetuous.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The cloud and darkness are left behind, and a
-clear sky and smooth sea ahead greet the
-passengers. Did you ever see a rainbow at midnight?
-Such an unusual nocturnal spectral phenomenon
-greeted us in midocean: the full moon in the east,
-the delicate rainbow in its infinite colors painted
-on the clouds in the west. Our captain, who had
-lived on the tropic sea for a quarter of a
-century, had never seen the like before. It was
-reserved for us to see a rainbow painted by the
-moon. With such pleasant diversions, by day
-and by night, we soon forget the ocean desert,
-and yet on the last day of the voyage we welcome
-the sight of land.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Be of good cheer, I see land.</p>
-<p>DIOGENES.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The vastness of the ocean and the smallness of
-Tahiti are in strange contrast. How the mariner,
-in setting the compass on leaving the harbor of
-San Francisco, can so unerringly find this little
-speck in the ocean nearly four thousand miles
-away, is an accomplishment which no one, not
-versed in the science of navigation can fully
-comprehend. We sighted Tahiti during the early
-part of the forenoon. The peaks of the two
-highest mountains in Tahiti, Oroheua and Aorii,
-seven to eight thousand feet in height, projected
-spectre-like from the surface of the ocean. These
-peaks appeared as bare, sharp, conical points in the
-clear sky above a mantle of clouds which
-enveloped the balance of the island. This misty
-draping of the two highest mountains takes place
-almost every day, as the clouds are attracted by
-the constant moisture of the soil, due to the
-dense forests and luxuriant tropical vegetation.</p>
-<p>The next sight of land brought into view the
-rugged mountains of Moorea and a group of
-small atoll islands. Moorea is in plain view from
-Papeete, and is the second largest of the Society
-Islands. Before we look at Tahiti at close range,
-let us examine the group of atoll islands which
-the steamer passes close enough to give us a
-good idea of their formation.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-atoll-islands">
-<h1>THE ATOLL ISLANDS</h1>
-<p>The atoll islands, so numerous in the South
-Seas, have a uniform conformation, and are of
-coral, deposited upon submerged summits of
-mountains of volcanic origin. The floor of the
-Pacific, like many other parts of the earth's
-surface, is undergoing constant changes,
-increasing or diminishing its level. Here and there, at
-certain intervals, volcanic eruptions have created
-mountains, which, in Hawaii, rise to nearly
-fourteen thousand and, in Tahiti, to over seven
-thousand feet. Around each of these innumerable
-islands and islets in the great Pacific Ocean the
-coral polyps have a fringing reef of rock. As
-these minute creatures can live only at a depth
-of twenty to thirty fathoms, and die as soon as
-exposed to the air, their life-work is confined to
-the coast of volcanic islands. Whenever, as it
-often happened, the island upon which they had
-congregated was slowly sinking, they would
-elevate their wall to save themselves from death
-in deep water. It is evident that if this process
-continued long enough, the land would entirely
-disappear and leave a submerged circular wall of
-coral just below the level of the low tide. The
-effects of the waves in breaking off the coral
-formation, large and small, in elevating them,
-would, in course of time, produce a ring of
-sandy beach, rising above the sea surrounding
-the central basin, filled with salt water entering
-through one or many open channels. Upon the
-beach, cocoanuts, washed ashore, would find a
-favorable soil for germination, and, ere long,
-stately palms would fringe the rim of the enclosed
-lagoon. Every atoll island has a peripheral
-fringe of cocoa-palms and a central lagoon which
-communicates with the ocean by one or more
-channels. Such an island is an atoll, the final
-stage in the disappearance of a volcanic islet
-from the surface of the sea. Such islands are
-numerous in the Society Islands, and the
-Paumotuan Archipelago consists exclusively of
-such atoll islands.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image6">
-<img alt="MOOREA" src="images/Image06.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 374.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">VIEW OF MOOREA</p>
-</div>
-<p>It is interesting to know how these minute
-coral polyps manage their work of island-building,
-or, rather, island-preservation. Coral
-formation is a calcareous secretion or deposit of many
-kinds of zoöphytes of the class Anthozoa, which
-assumes infinite and often beautiful forms,
-according to the different laws which govern the
-manner of germination of the polyps of various
-species. The coral-producing zoöphytes are
-compound animals, which multiply in the very
-swiftest manner, by germination or budding,
-young polyp buds springing from the original
-polyp, sometimes indifferently from any part of
-its surface, sometimes only from its upper
-circumference or from its base, and not separating
-from it, but remaining in the same spot when
-the original parent or polyp is dead, and
-producing buds in their turn. The reproductive
-capacity of these polyps is marvelous and explains the
-greatness of their work in building up whole
-islands and the countless submerged reefs so
-much dreaded by the mariners of the South Seas.
-The calcareous deposition begins when the
-zoöphytes are still simple polyps, owing their
-existence to oviparous reproduction, adhering to a
-rock or other substance, to which the calcareous
-material becomes attached, and on which the
-coral is built up, the hard deposits of past
-generations forming the base to which those of the
-progeny are attracted. The coral formation takes
-place with astonishing rapidity; under favorable
-circumstances, masses of coral have been found
-to increase in height several feet in a few months,
-and a channel cut in a reef surrounding a coral
-island, to permit the passage of a schooner, has
-been blocked with coral in ten years. Coral
-formations have been found immediately attached
-to the land, whilst in many other cases the reef
-surrounds the island, the intervening space, of
-irregular, but nowhere of great width, forming a
-lagoon or channel of deep water, protected by
-the reef from wind and waves. According to
-Darwin, this kind of reef is formed from a reef
-of the former merely fringing kind, by the
-gradual subsidence of the rocky basis, carrying
-down the fringe of coral to a greater depth;
-whilst the greatest activity of life is displayed by
-polyps of the kind most productive of large
-masses of coral in the outer parts which are
-most exposed to the waves. In this manner he
-also accounts for the formation of true coral
-islands, or atolls, which consist merely of a
-narrow reef of coral surrounding a central
-lagoon, and very often of a reef, perhaps half a
-mile in breadth, clothed with luxuriant
-vegetation and the never-absent cocoa-palms,
-bordered by a narrow beach of snowy whiteness, and
-forming an arc, the convexity of which is toward
-the prevailing wind, whilst a straight line of reef
-not generally rising above the reach of the tide,
-forms the chord of the arc. The reef is
-generally intersected by a narrow channel into the
-enclosed lagoon, the waters of which are still and
-beautifully transparent, teeming with the greatest
-variety of fish. Its surface is enlivened by
-water-fowl, and the depth of water close to the
-precipitous sides of the reef is almost always very
-great. The channels are kept open by the flux
-and reflux of the tide, the current and waves of
-which are often so swift and high as to become
-a menace to schooners attempting entrance into
-the lagoon. On the beach, soil most conducive
-to the growth of cocoanut-palms is formed by
-accumulation of sand, shells, fragments of coral,
-seaweeds, decayed leaves, etc. The giant
-cocoanuts planted in this soil either by the hand of man
-or by the waves washing them ashore, germinate
-quickly, and in a few years the narrow circular
-strip of land enclosing the lagoon is fringed with
-colonnades of tall fruit-bearing palms. These
-islands rise nowhere more than a few feet above
-the level of the sea. Sometimes the upheaval of
-coral formation by volcanic action results in the
-making of a real island, in which event the lagoon
-disappears. Islands with such an origin
-sometimes rise to a height of five hundred feet and
-often exhibit precipitous cliffs and contain
-extensive caves. I had read a description of the
-Paumotu atoll islands by Stevenson, and
-consequently I was much interested in the little group
-of atolls we passed before coming into full view
-of Tahiti. As these islands, like all true atolls,
-are only a few feet above the level of the sea,
-they can not be seen from the sea at anything like
-a great distance. When they were pointed out
-to us by an officer of the steamer, we could see
-no land; they appeared like oases in the desert,
-green patches in the ocean, due to the
-cocoapalms which guarded their shores. As we came
-nearer, we could make out the rim of land and
-the snow-white coral beach. The smallest of
-these atoll islands are not inhabited, but regular
-visits are made to them in a small schooner or
-native double canoe to harvest and bring to
-market the never-failing crops of cocoanuts.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image7">
-<img alt="TAHITI FROM THE HARBOR OF PAPEETE" src="images/Image07.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 375.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITI FROM THE HARBOR OF PAPEETE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-landing-at-papeete">
-<h1>THE LANDING AT PAPEETE</h1>
-<p>As we left the atolls behind us and neared
-Tahiti, we could see more clearly the outlines of
-the rugged island, disrobed, by this time, of its
-vestments of clouds. From a distance, the carpet
-of green which extends from its base to near the
-summit of the highest peaks is varied here and
-there by patches of red volcanic earth, thus
-adding to the picturesqueness of the scene. What at
-first appears as a greensward on the shore, on
-nearer view discloses itself as a broad fringe of
-cocoa-palms, extending from the edge of the
-ocean to the foot of the mountains, and from
-there well up on their slopes, where they are lost
-in the primeval forest. Above the tree-line, low
-shrubs and hardy grasses compose the verdure
-up to the bare, brown mountain-peaks. The
-largest trees are seen in the mountains' deep
-ravines, which are cut out of the side of the
-heights by gushing of cold, clear waters, which
-drain the very heart of the mountains, bounding
-and leaping over boulders and rapids in their race
-to a resting-place in the near-by calm waters of
-the lagoon. As we came nearer to the island we
-were able to make out the white lighthouse
-on Point Venus, seven miles from Papeete. Here,
-Captain Cook, during one of his visits to the
-island, was stationed for a considerable length of
-time for the purpose of observing the transit of
-Venus; hence the name of the point.</p>
-<p>Near the harbor, a native pilot came on board,
-and, by careful maneuvering, safely guided the
-ship through the very narrow channel in the reef
-into the harbor, with the tricolor flying from the
-top mast. From the harbor, the little city of
-Papeete and the island present an inspiring view.
-A charming islet on the left as we enter the
-harbor, looks like an emerald set in the blue
-water. It serves as a quarantine station, and
-the little snow-white buildings upon it appear like
-toy houses. The small city is spread out among
-cocoa-palms, ornamental and shade trees. The
-green of the foliage of these trees is continuous
-with the forest-clad mountains which form the
-background of the beautiful plateau on which the
-city is built. The harbor of Papeete is land and
-reef-locked, small, but deep enough to float the
-largest steamers plying in the Pacific Ocean. As
-the steamer came up slowly to the wharf,
-hundreds of people, a strange mixture of natives,
-half-castes, Europeans and Chinese, old and
-young, dressed in clothes of all imaginable colors,
-red being by far the most predominant, crowded
-the dock. Many of the children were naked,
-and not a few of the men and boys were
-unencumbered by clothing, with the exception of the
-typical, much checkered Tahitian cotton
-loin-cloth. A number of handsome carriages brought
-the élite of the city to take part in this most
-important of all monthly events.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>They come to see; they come to be seen.</p>
-<p>OVIDIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Custom-house officers, uniformed native
-policemen, government officials, French soldiers and
-merchants, mingled with the dusky natives and
-contributed much to the uniqueness of the
-landing-scene. The dense, motley crowd was anxious
-to see and be seen, but was orderly and well
-behaved. The custom-house officers were
-accommodating and courteous, and passed our
-hand-baggage without inspection. On the wharf was
-a small mountain of cocoanuts, in readiness to
-be loaded as a part of the return cargo of the
-<em>Mariposa</em>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-city-of-papeete">
-<h1>THE CITY OF PAPEETE</h1>
-<p>Papeete is the capital of Tahiti, the seat of
-government of the entire archipelago, and the
-principal commercial city of the French
-possessions in Oceanica. It is a typical city of the
-South Sea world, as it is viewed from the deck
-of the steamer and while walking or riding along
-its narrow, crooked streets. From the harbor,
-little can be seen of its buildings, except the
-spire of the cathedral and the low steeples of two
-Protestant churches, the low tower of the
-governor's palace, formerly the home of royalty, the
-military hospital, the wharf, and a few business
-houses loosely scattered along the principal
-street, the Quai du Commerce that skirts the
-harbor. The residence part of the city is hidden
-behind towering cocoa-palms and magnificent
-shade-trees among which the flamboyant (burau)
-trees are the most beautiful. It is situated on
-a low plateau with a background of
-forest-clad mountains, the beautiful little harbor, the
-spray-covered coral reef, the vast ocean and the
-picturesque outlines of Moorea in front of it.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image8">
-<img alt="PALM FOREST" src="images/Image08.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 370.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">IN THE SHADOW OF THE PALM FOREST</p>
-</div>
-<p>Papeete has no sidewalks. The streets are
-narrow, irregularly laid out, and none of them
-paved. Most of the houses are one-story frame
-buildings, covered with corrugated iron roofs.
-There are only two or three large stores; the
-remaining business-places are small shops, many
-of them owned and managed by Chinamen. The
-present population, made up of natives of all
-tints, from a light chocolate to nearly white, six
-to eight hundred whites and about three hundred
-Chinese, numbers in the neighborhood of five
-thousand, nearly half of the population of the
-entire island. There are about five hundred
-Chinese in the island, who, by their industry and
-knowledge of business methods, have become
-formidable competitors of the merchants from
-other foreign countries. Their small shops and
-coffee-houses in Papeete and the country districts
-are well patronized by the natives.</p>
-<p>Papeete is the commercial center of Oceanica.
-There are no department stores there. Business
-is specialized more there than perhaps in any
-other city. All of the shops, even the largest, look
-small in the eyes of Americans. There are dry
-goods stores, grocery stores, millinery shops, two
-small frame hotels, the Hotel Francais and
-another smaller one, both on the Quai, a few
-boarding-houses, two saloons, and no bank. The
-scarcity of saloons can be explained by the fact
-that the natives are temperate in their habits.
-According to a law enforced by the government,
-the native women are prohibited from
-frequenting such places.</p>
-<p>The public wash-basin, supplied with running
-fresh water from a mountain stream, is a sight
-worth seeing. From a dozen to twenty native
-women, and a few soldiers, may be found here
-almost any time of the day, paddling knee-deep
-in the water, using stones in place of washboards
-in performing their arduous work. This
-primitive way of washing gives excellent results,
-judging from the snow-white, spotless linen
-garments worn by the Europeans and well-to-do
-natives.</p>
-<p>The little plaza or square in the center of the
-city is used as a market-place where natives
-congregate at five o'clock in the morning, to make
-their modest purchases of fish, plantain,
-pineapple, melon or preserved shrimp done up in
-joints of bamboo. This is the place to learn what
-the islanders produce, sell and buy.</p>
-<p>The public buildings are well adapted for a
-tropic climate. The most important of these is
-the palace of the last of the Tahitian kings, now
-used as the office of the government. It is a
-handsome white building, surrounded by ample
-grounds well laid out, and beautified by trees,
-shrubs and flowers. The government
-schoolhouse is an enormous frame building, resting
-upon posts, several feet from the ground, with
-more than one-half of its walls taken up by
-arched windows, the best lighted and most
-thoroughly ventilated building in the city, an
-ideal schoolhouse for the tropics. Among the
-churches of different denominations, the
-Catholic cathedral is the largest and best, although in
-the States it would not be considered an ornament
-for a small country village.</p>
-<p>The city is well supplied with pure water from
-a mountain stream, but lacks a system of
-sewerage. The gardens and grounds of the best
-residences of the foreigners present an exquisite
-display of flowers that flourish best in the tropic
-soil, under the invigorating rays of the tropic
-sun, and the soothing effects of the frequent
-showers of rain, which are not limited to any
-particular season of the year.</p>
-<p>Papeete, like all cities in the equatorial region,
-is a city of supreme idleness and freedom from
-care. The citizens can not comprehend that
-&quot;The great principle of human satisfaction
-is engagement&quot; (Paley). This idleness is
-inherent in the natives, and under the climatic
-conditions, and I suppose to a certain extent by
-suggestion, is soon acquired by the foreigners.
-Contentment and absence of anxiety characterize
-the life of the Tahitian. He has no desire to
-accumulate wealth; he is satisfied with little. He
-is &quot;shut up in measureless content&quot;
-(Shakespeare); he is inspired with the good idea that
-&quot;he that maketh haste to be rich, shall not be
-innocent&quot; (Proverb xxviii: 20). The merchants
-open their shops at sunrise, lock the doors at ten,
-retire to their homes for breakfast, take their
-two-hour siesta, return to their business, suspend
-work at five, and the remainder of the day and
-the entire evening are devoted to rest, social visits
-and divers amusements. The social center of
-the foreigners is the Cercle Bougainville, a small
-frame building which serves the purpose of a
-club house. Bicycling is a favorite means of
-travel and sport for the Europeans as well as the
-natives of all classes. This vehicle has found its
-way not only into the capital city but also into the
-country districts throughout the island. The
-splendid macadamized road which encircles the
-island furnishes a great inducement for this sport.
-Two of the wealthiest citizens travel the
-principal streets in the city and the ninety-mile drive
-in the most modern fashion by riding an
-automobile.</p>
-<p>There are few if any door locks in private
-residences, hotels and boarding-houses, the best
-possible proof that the inhabitants are
-law-abiding citizens. In the boarding-house in which
-I lived, the main entrance was left wide open
-during the night, and none of the door locks
-was supplied with a key. The native women wear
-Mother Hubbard gowns of bright calico; the
-better class of men dress in European fashion,
-while the laborers and men from the country
-districts wear a pareu (loin-cloth) of bright
-calico, with or without an undershirt. The
-average Tahitian does not believe in:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>We are captivated by dress.</p>
-<p>OVIDIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image9">
-<img alt="THE S.S. MARIPOSA" src="images/Image09.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 382.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">THE S.S. &quot;MARIPOSA&quot; LEAVING THE HARBOR OF PAPEETE, November 13, 1903</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="topography-of-the-island">
-<h1>TOPOGRAPHY OF THE ISLAND</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Into the silent land!</p>
-<p>Ah, who shall lead us thither?</p>
-<p>VON SALIS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>There is no spot on earth more free from care,
-worry and unrest than the island of Tahiti. The
-abundance with which nature here has provided
-for the wants of man, the uniform soothing
-climate, the calmness of the Pacific Ocean, the
-pleasing scenery quiet the nerves, induce sleep
-and reduce to a minimum the efforts of man in
-the struggle for life. It is the island of peace,
-contentment and rest, a paradise on earth.</p>
-<p>No writer has ever done justice to the natural
-beauties of this gem of the South Seas. The
-towering mountains, the tropical forests, the
-numerous rippling streams of crystal water,
-shaded dark ravines, the palm-fringed shore, the
-lagoons with their quiet, peaceful, clear waters
-painted in most exquisite colors of all shades of
-green, blue and salmon by the magic influence of
-the tropical sun, their outside wall of coral reef
-ceaselessly kissed by the caressing, foaming,
-moaning surf, the near-by picturesque island of
-Moorea, with its precipitous mountains rising
-from the deep bed of the sea, the flat basin-like,
-palm-fringed atolls in the distance, and the vast
-ocean beyond, make up a combination of pictures
-of which the mind never tires, and which engrave
-themselves indelibly on the tablet of memory.</p>
-<p>Tahiti is a typical mountain island, protected
-against the aggressive ocean by a coral reef
-which forms almost a complete wall around it,
-enclosing lagoons of much beauty, which teem
-with a great variety of fish. It is thirty-five
-miles in length, and on an average twelve miles
-in breadth. It is shaped somewhat in the form
-of an hourglass, the narrow part at Isthmus
-Terrawow. The circuit of the island by
-following the coast is less than one hundred and twenty
-miles. The ninety-mile drive which engirdles the
-island cuts off some of the irregular projections
-into the sea. The interior is very mountainous
-and cut into ravines so deep that it has never been
-inhabited to any extent. The highest peaks are
-Orohena and Aorii, from seven to eight thousand
-feet in height, the former cleft into two points
-of rock which are often draped with dark masses
-of tropic clouds. Numerous other peaks of
-lesser magnitude are crowded together in the
-center of the island, their broad foundations
-encroaching upon the plain. The people live on the
-narrow strip of low land at the base of the
-mountains and running down to the shore, where
-the soil is exceedingly fertile and always well
-watered by numerous rivers, brooks and rivulets.
-Numberless cascades can be seen from the
-ninety-mile drive, leaping over cliffs and appearing like
-silver threads in the dark green of the
-mountain-sides. The strip of arable land at the base of the
-mountains varies in width from the bare
-precipitous cliffs, without even a beach, to one, or
-perhaps in the widest places, two miles. The
-larger streams have cut out a few broader valleys.
-It is this narrow strip of land which is inhabited,
-the little villages being usually located near the
-mouth of a river on the coast-line, insuring for
-the inhabitants a pure water-supply and facilities
-for fresh-water bathing, a frequent and pleasant
-pastime for the natives of both sexes and all
-ages.</p>
-<p>Wherever there is sufficient depth of soil,
-vegetation is rampant. The fertility of the soil and
-the stimulating effect of constant moisture on
-vegetable life are best seen by the vitality
-exhibited by the fence-posts. I have seen fence-posts
-a foot and more in circumference, after being
-implanted in the soil, strike root, sprout and
-develop into trees of no small size. The
-mountains, and more especially the ravines, are heavily
-timbered. There is no place on earth where the
-scenery is more beautiful and sublime than at
-many points along the ninety-mile drive. The
-lofty mountains, the fertile plain, the many rivers,
-brooks, rivulets and glimpses of foaming
-cascades, lagoons, of the surf beating the coral reef
-in the distance, the limitless ocean beyond, the
-luxuriant rampant vegetation, the beautiful
-flowers, the majestic palm-trees, the quaint villages
-and their interesting inhabitants, form a picture
-which is beautiful, and, at the same time, sublime.
-As a whole it is sublime; in detail, beautiful.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Beauty charms, sublimity awes us, and is often accompanied
-with a feeling resembling fear; while beauty rather
-attracts and draws us towards it.</p>
-<p>FLEMING.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Let us see how Captain Cook was impressed
-with Tahiti when he first cast his eyes upon this
-gem of the Pacific:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Perhaps there is scarcely a spot in the universe that
-affords a more luxuriant prospect than the southeast
-part of Otaheite [Tahiti.] The hills are high and steep,
-and, in many places, craggy. But they are covered to
-the very summits with trees and shrubs, in such a
-manner that the spectator can scarcely help thinking
-that the very rocks possess the property of producing
-and supporting their verdant clothing. The flat land
-which bounds those hills toward the sea, and the
-interjacent valleys also, teem with various productions that
-grow with the most exuberant vigour; and, at once, fill
-the mind of the beholder with the idea that no place
-upon earth can outdo this, in the strength and beauty
-of vegetation. Nature has been no less liberal in
-distributing rivulets, which are found in every valley, and
-as they approach the sea, often divide into two or three
-branches, fertilizing the flat lands through which they
-run.</blockquote>
-<p>Tahiti is the same to-day as when Captain
-Cook visited it for the first time. The only
-decided changes which have taken place since
-are the building up of the capital city Papeete,
-and the construction of the ninety-mile drive.
-The beauty of the island has been maintained
-because the natives have preserved the
-magnificent primeval forests. Strip Tahiti of its
-forests and it will be made a desert in a few years.
-Nature relies on the forests to attract the clouds
-which bring the moisture, and assist in the
-formation and preservation of the soil. Remove the
-trees, and drouth and floods will destroy
-vegetation, and the latter will wash the existing soil
-into the hungry abyss of the ocean. Fertile and
-beautiful as Captain Cook found Tahiti, he
-deprecated the idea of settling it with whites.</p>
-<blockquote>
-Our occasional visits may, in some respects, have
-benefited its inhabitants; but a permanent
-establishment amongst them, conducted as most European
-establishments amongst Indian nations have
-unfortunately been, would, I fear, give them just cause to
-lament that our ships had ever found them out. Indeed,
-it is very unlikely that any measure of this kind should
-ever be seriously thought of, as it can neither serve the
-purposes of public ambition, nor of private avarice;
-and, without such inducements, I may pronounce, that
-it will never be undertaken.</blockquote>
-<p>The island has been invaded and taken by the
-whites and the results to the natives have been in
-many respects disastrous, which goes to prove
-the correctness of Captain Cook's prophecy.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image10">
-<img alt="THE ROYAL PALACE" src="images/Image10.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 381.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">THE ROYAL PALACE (Now the headquarters of the Governor).</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-climate">
-<h1>THE CLIMATE</h1>
-<p>The climate of Tahiti, although tropical, is
-favorably influenced by the trade-winds and
-frequent showers. The breezes from ocean and
-land keep the heated atmosphere in motion, and
-the frequent rains throughout the year have a
-direct effect in lowering the temperature. The
-entire island from the shore to the highest
-mountain-peaks, is covered by forests and a vigorous
-vegetation. These retain the moisture and
-attract the pregnant clouds, securing, throughout
-the year, a sufficient rainfall to feed the many
-mountain streams and water the rich soil of the
-mountain-sides, valleys, ravines and lowlands
-along the coast. The temperature seldom exceeds
-90 degrees Fahrenheit, and during the coldest
-months, March and April, it occasionally falls
-as low as 65 degrees Fahrenheit.
-The atmosphere is charged with humidity, and when this
-condition reaches the maximum degree, the heat
-is oppressive, more especially when there is no
-land or ocean breeze. If a hotel could be built
-at an elevation of three to four thousand feet
-above the level of the sea, the guests would find
-a climate which could not be surpassed in any
-other part of the world. A prolonged residence
-in Papeete or any other part of the island near
-the sea-level is debilitating for the whites. Those
-of the white inhabitants who can afford it, leave
-the island every three or five years and seek
-recuperation and a renewal of energy in a cooler
-climate, usually in California or Europe. Papeete,
-partially enclosed by mountains, and only a few
-feet above the level of the sea, and on the
-leeward side of the island, is said to be one of the
-warmest places in the island. The village of
-Papara gets the full benefit of the trade-winds
-and the land-breeze, and is one of the coolest
-spots in Tahiti. Tahiti's summer-time is our
-winter. I was fortunate in visiting the island
-during the latter part of January. It is the time
-when Nature makes a special effort here to
-produce the luxuriant vegetation after the
-drenching rains of December. It is the time when the
-evergreen trees cast off, here and there, a faded
-leaf, to be replaced by a new one from the
-vigorous unfolding buds. It is the season of flowers
-and the greatest variety of fruits. It may
-interest the reader to know that one day seven
-different kinds of fruits were served at the
-breakfast-table, a luxury out of reach of our millionaires at
-their homes in the North at that time of the year.
-For a winter vacation, the months of
-January and February offer the greatest
-inducements. Those who are in need of an ideal mental
-rest, and are fond of a long ocean voyage, and
-enjoy tropic scenery and the marvelous products
-of the fertile soil of the tropics, should not fail
-to visit Tahiti, the little paradise in the midst of
-the vast expanse of the Pacific Ocean.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="history-of-the-island">
-<h1>HISTORY OF THE ISLAND</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>History is the witness of the times, the torch of
-truth, the life of memory, the teacher of life, the
-messenger of antiquity.</p>
-<p>CICERO.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It was my privilege during my brief stay in
-Tahiti to meet Tati Salmon, chief of the Papara
-district. He is a direct descendant of one of the
-two noble families of the island, the Tevas, and
-one of the most prominent and influential citizens
-of the island. I asked him to what race the
-Tahitians belonged. To this question he had a
-ready reply. He said: &quot;We belong to no race;
-man was created here; this is the lost Garden of
-Eden.&quot; There is much force, if not truth, in
-this assertion when we take into consideration
-the charming beauty of the island and the
-bounteous provisions which Nature has made here for
-the existence of man. Then, too, the Tahitian
-is a good specimen of manhood, intellectually and
-physically, far superior to the Negro race and
-the Mongolian. Ariitaimai (Arii Taimai E), the
-mother of the chief just referred to and the
-authoress of the book mentioned in the preface,
-believes that the Tahitians belong to the great
-Aryan race, the race of Arii, and that their
-chiefs were Arii, not kings, and the head chiefs,
-Ariirahi—Great Chiefs. It was only the latter
-who were entitled to wear the girdle of red
-feathers, as much the symbol of their preeminence
-as the crown and sceptre of European royalty.
-The Tahitians are Polynesians, like the
-inhabitants of most of the South Seas and of Hawaii,
-and there can be but little doubt that the
-Polynesians belong to the Malay race, having migrated
-from island to island, from west to east, by way
-of Java, Samoa and the Hawaiian Islands. As
-these voyages had to be made by means of frail
-canoes, we can readily conceive the hardships
-endured by the bold navigators of centuries ago.
-A story current in Tahiti relates that it was thus
-that the great chief Olopaua of Hawaii, driven
-from home by disastrous floods, bore his wife
-Lu'ukia in the twelfth century, to find a new
-dwelling place in Tahiti, twenty-three hundred
-miles away. It is said that the chiefess was a
-poetess, a dancer famed for grace, and the
-inventor of a style of dress which is still made by
-the Hawaiians. Many of the primitive peoples
-trace their origin to a legend which is handed
-down from generation to generation.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>In all ages of the world there is nothing with which
-mankind hath been so much delighted as with those
-little fictitious stories which go under the name of fables
-or apologues among the ancient heathens, and of
-parables in the sacred writings.</p>
-<p>BISHOP PORTEUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The Tevas of Tahiti have their legend and it
-is related by Ariitaimai, as it has been told for
-many generations. They take pride in the story
-that they are the direct descendants from the
-Shark God. The legend tells how many
-centuries ago a chief of Punaauia, by the name of
-Te manutu-ruu, married a chiefess of Vaiari,
-named Hototu, and had a son, Terii te moanarau.
-At the birth of the child, the father set out in
-his canoe for the Paumotu Islands to obtain red
-feathers (Ura) to make the royal belt for the
-young prince. The legend begins by assuming
-that Vaiari was the oldest family, with its Maraes,
-and that Punaauia was later in seniority and rank.
-While Te manutu-ruu was absent on his long
-voyage to the Paumotus, a visitor appeared at
-Vaiari, and was entertained by the chiefess. This
-visitor was the first ancestor of the Tevas. He
-was only half human, the other half fish, or Shark
-God; and he swam from the ocean, through the
-reef, into the Vaihiria River, where he came
-ashore, and introduced himself as Vari
-mataauhoe, and, after having partaken of the
-hospitalities of the chiefess, took up his residence with
-her. But after their intimacy had lasted some
-time, one day, when they were together, Hototu's
-dog came into the house and showed his
-affection for his mistress by licking her face, or,
-as we should say now, kissed her, although in
-those days this mark of affection was unknown,
-as the Polynesians instead only touched noses
-as an affectionate greeting. At this the
-man-shark was so displeased that he abandoned the
-chiefess. He walked into the river, turned fish
-again and swam out to sea. On his way he met
-the canoe of the Chief Te manutu-ruu returning
-from the Paumotus, and stopped to speak to him.
-The chief invited Vari mataauhoe to return with
-him, but the man-shark declined, giving as his
-reason that the chiefess was too fond of dogs.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image11">
-<img alt="AVENUE OF PURRANUIA, PAPEETE" src="images/Image11.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 379.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">AVENUE OF PURRANUIA, PAPEETE</p>
-</div>
-<p>The legend proves that the natives regarded
-Vaiari as the source of their aristocracy. Papara
-makes the same claim, for when Vari mataauhoe
-left Hototu he said to her: &quot;You will bear me a
-child; if a girl, she will belong to you and take
-your name; but if a boy, you are to call him
-Teva; rain and wind will accompany his birth,
-and to whatever spot he goes, rain and wind will
-always foretell his coming. He is of the race of
-Ariirahi, and you are to build him a Marae
-which you are to call Matava (the two eyes of
-Tahiti), and there he is to wear the Marotea,
-and he must be known as the child of Ahurei
-(the wind that blows from Taiarapu).&quot; A boy
-was born, and, as foretold, in rain and wind.
-The name of Teva was given to him; and Matoa
-was built; and there Teva ruled. From this boy
-came the name Teva; but when and how it was
-applied to the clan no one knows. The members
-of the tribe or clan believe it must have been
-given by the Arii of Papara or Vaiari. To this
-day, the Tevas seldom travel without rain and
-wind, so that they use the word Teva
-rarivari—Teva wet always and everywhere. The Vaiari
-people still point out the place where the first
-ancestor of the clan lived as a child, his first
-bathing place, and the different waters in which
-he fished as he came on his way toward Papara.
-This legend is to-day as fresh in the district of
-Papara as it was centuries ago. It is but natural
-that the Tevas, one of the two most influential
-and powerful of the tribes of Tahiti, should be
-anxious to trace their ancestry to a royal origin
-even if the first ancestor should be a man-shark,
-little remembering that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>It is not wealth nor ancestry, but honorable conduct
-and a noble disposition that make men great.</p>
-<p>OVIDIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>As the Tahitians had no written language
-before the missionaries visited the island, little
-is known of its earlier history. The history
-of the island since its discovery has been
-accurately written up by Ariitaimai, an eye-witness of
-many of the most stirring events and on that
-account most to be relied upon, for</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The only good histories are those that have been
-written by the persons themselves who commanded in
-the affairs whereof they write.</p>
-<p>MONTAIGNE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Let us follow her account of the history of
-the island since its discovery by Captain Samuel
-Wallis, June 18, 1767. The captain made a
-voyage around the world in Her Majesty's ship
-<em>Dolphin</em>, and on his way found the island, and
-called it Otaheite. At that time, Amo was head
-chief of Papara and of the Tevas, or rather his
-son Teriirere, born about 1762, was head chief,
-and Amo exercised power as his guardian,
-according to native custom, which made the
-eldest child immediately on birth, the head of the
-family. At that time the power of calling the
-Tevas to conference or war was peculiar to the
-Papara head chief; the military strength of the
-Tevas was unconquerable, if it could be united;
-but perhaps the most decisive part of every
-head chief's influence was his family connection.
-Nowhere in the world was marriage a matter of
-more political and social consequence than in
-Tahiti. Women occupied an important position
-in society and political affairs. The chiefesses
-held the reins of government with as much
-firmness as the chiefs, and commanded the same
-influence and respect. She was as independent
-of her husband as of any other chief; she had her
-seat or throne, in the Marae even to the
-exclusion of her husband; and if she were ambitious
-she might win or lose crowns for her children
-as happened with Captain Wallis' friend Oberea,
-the great-aunt of Ariitaimai Purea, and with her
-niece, Tetuauni reiaiteatea, the mother of the
-first King Pomare. At the time of Wallis' and
-Cook's visits, Papara was the principal city in
-Tahiti, and Papeete, the present capital city of the
-French possessions in Oceanica, a mere village.
-The Papara head chief was never the head chief
-of the whole island, but his power and influence
-were predominant throughout the whole island.
-The kingship which Europeans insisted on
-conferring on him, or on any other head chief who
-happened for the time to rival him, was never
-accepted by the natives until forced upon them
-by foreign influence and arms. From this it will
-be seen that before European influence made
-itself felt, the Tahitians were divided into tribes
-ruled by so many chiefs, with a head chief
-whose influence extended over the entire island.
-The form of native government was very simple
-and had many very commendable features. Wars
-between the tribes and between Tahiti and the
-neighboring island, Moorea, were, however, of
-frequent occurrence.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image12">
-<img alt="NATIVE VILLAGE" src="images/Image12.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 391.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">NATIVE VILLAGE BY THE SEA</p>
-</div>
-<p>All exact knowledge concerning dates in the
-history of the island begins with June 24, 1767,
-when Wallis warped his ship into the bay of
-Matavai, the most northerly point of the island.
-The appearance of the foreigners, the first time
-the natives had ever seen a white man and such a
-great ship, created consternation. Excitement
-ran high on the landing of the crew. The natives
-attacked them, but their rude implements of
-warfare could not cope with firearms, and they
-were defeated. Two days later, June 26th, the
-battle was renewed and again terminated in the
-defeat of the natives, promptly followed by
-sudden friendship for their first European
-visitors. The natives, extremely superstitious,
-were at first suspicious, and it required some time
-to establish free relations between them and the
-commander and crew of the <em>Dolphin</em>. Strangely
-enough, the first native to board the ship was a
-woman. The incident is related by Wallis
-himself:</p>
-<blockquote>
-On Saturday, the 11th, in the afternoon, the gunner
-came on board with a tall woman, who seemed to be
-about five and forty years of age, of a pleasing
-countenance and majestic deportment. He told me that she
-was but just come into that part of the country, and that
-seeing great respect paid her by the rest of the natives,
-he had made her some presents; in return for which
-she had invited him to her home, which was about two
-miles up the valley, and given him some large hogs;
-after which she returned with him to the watering-place
-and expressed a desire to go on board the ship, in
-which wish he had thought it proper, on all accounts,
-that she should be gratified. She seemed to be under
-no restraint, either from diffidence or fear, when she
-came into the ship, and she behaved all the while she
-was on board with an easy freedom that always
-distinguishes conscious superiority and habitual command.
-I gave her a large blue mantle that reached from her
-shoulders to her feet, which I drew over her, and tied on
-with ribbons; I gave her also a looking-glass, beads of
-several sorts, and many other things, which she accepted
-with good grace and much pleasure. She took notice
-that I had been ill, and pointed to the shore. I
-understood that she meant I should go thither to perfect my
-recovery, and I made signs that I would go thither the
-next morning. When she intimated an inclination to
-return, I ordered the gunner to go with her, who, having
-set her on shore, attended her to her habitation, which
-he described as being very large and well built. He
-said that in this house she had many guards and
-domestics, and that she had another at a little distance
-which was enclosed in lattice work.</blockquote>
-<p>This visit opened the island to the
-Englishmen. Wallis repeatedly refers to his first visitor
-as &quot;my princess, or rather queen.&quot; When he
-came on shore the next day he was met by the
-princess, who ordered that he and the first
-lieutenant and purser, who were also ill, should be
-carried by the people to her home, where they
-were treated in a most hospitable manner. Here
-is a beautiful instance of natural hospitality,
-charity and gratitude combined; a kindly deed
-dictated by unselfish motives, an exhibition of
-virtues so rarely met with in the common walks
-of life.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Hospitality to the better sort and charity to the poor;
-two virtues that are never exercised so well as when
-they accompany each other.</p>
-<p>ATTERBURY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The princess had full control over the curious,
-motley crowd, which gave way to the strangers
-by a sign of her hand. The house proved to be
-the Fare-hau, or Council-house, of Haapape, and
-the princess, as Wallis called her, who did not
-belong to Haapape, but to quite another part of
-the island, was herself a guest whose presence
-there was due to her relationship with the chief.</p>
-<p>Wallis left the Island July 27th. His &quot;queen&quot;
-and her attendants came on board and bade him
-and his crew a most affectionate farewell.
-Neither Wallis, nor Bougainville, who visited
-Tahiti in April, 1768, eight months later, ever
-learned what her true rank was, or from what
-part of the island she came. According to
-Ariitaimai, she was her great-great-grandaunt
-Purea, or rather, the wife of her
-great-great-granduncle.</p>
-<p>Bougainville named the island New Cytherea,
-and Commerson, the naturalist, charmed by its
-beauty and astonished at its resources, called it
-Utopia. The latter gave the following romantic
-description of the island and its people in a letter
-published in the <em>Mercure de France</em>:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Je puis vous dire que c'est le seul coin de la terre ou
-habitent des hommes sans vices, sans préjugés, sans
-besoins, sans dissensions. Nés sous le plus beau ciel,
-nourris des fruits d'une terre féconde sans culture, régis
-par des pères de famille plutôt que par des rois, ils ne
-connaissent d'autre dieu que l'Amour. Tous les jours
-lai sont consacrés, toute l'isle son temple, toutes les
-femmes—me demandez-vous? Les rivales des
-Geôrgiennes en beauté et les sœurs des grâces toutes
-unes.</blockquote>
-<p>Such was the simple, innocent, happy island
-life when Tahiti was discovered by the white
-man, whose pretended object was to bring to
-the natives the benefits of modern civilization.
-As to the immediate effects of European
-civilization on the morals of the natives, Ariitaimai
-has the following to say in reply to the alleged
-laxity of Tahitian morals:</p>
-<blockquote>
-No one knows how much of the laxity of morals was
-due to the French and English themselves, whose
-appearance certainly caused a sudden and shocking
-overthrow of such moral rules as had existed before in
-the island society: and the &quot;supposed&quot; means that when
-the island society as a whole is taken into account.
-Marriage was real as far as it went, and the standard
-rather higher than that of Paris; in some ways
-extremely lax, and in others strict and stern to a
-degree that would have astonished even the most
-conventional English nobleman, had he understood it</blockquote>
-<p>The third European to visit Tahiti was that
-intrepid explorer, Captain Cook, who entered
-Matavai Bay on the 13th of April, 1769, in Her
-Majesty's bark, the <em>Endeavor</em>, on his first voyage
-around the world. He met chief Tootahah,
-under whose protection he settled on Point
-Venus. He was accompanied by a staff of
-scientists, among them Joseph Banks and Dr.
-Solander, a Swedish naturalist. Captain Wallis'
-&quot;queen&quot; was again on the shore to meet the
-strangers. Captain Cook gives a detailed
-account of her visit:</p>
-<blockquote>
-She first went to Mr. Banks' tent at the fort, where
-she was not known, till the master, who knew her,
-happening to go ashore, brought her on board with
-two men and several women, who seemed to be all of
-her family. I made them all some presents or other,
-but to Obariea (for that was the woman's name) I gave
-several things, in return for which, as soon as I went
-on shore with her, she gave me a hog and several
-bunches of plantains. These she caused to be carried
-from her canoes up to the fort in a kind of procession,
-she and I bringing up the rear. This woman is about
-forty years of age, and, like most of the other women,
-very masculine. She is head or chief of her own family
-or tribe, but to all appearance hath no authority over
-the rest of the inhabitants, whatever she might have
-when the <em>Dolphin</em> was here.</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image13">
-<img alt="NATIVE HUT" src="images/Image13.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 378.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">NATIVE HUT CLOSE BY THE SEA</p>
-</div>
-<p>Cook ascertained at this time, that Obariea
-was the wife of the most influential chief of the
-island, Oamo, but did not live with him. She
-had two children, a daughter eighteen years old,
-and a boy of seven, the heir to the throne. He
-says in his Journal:</p>
-<blockquote>
-The young boy above mentioned is son to Oamo and
-Obariea, but Oamo and Obariea do not at this time live
-together as man and wife, he not being able to endure
-with her troublesome disposition. I mention this
-because it shows that separation in the marriage state is
-not unknown to these people.</blockquote>
-<p>When Cook made his second visit to the island,
-in 1774, he learned that Oamo and Obariea, or,
-as they are called in the genealogy of the Tevas,
-Amo and Purea, had been driven from Papara
-into the mountains. Vehiatu, the victor, made
-Amo resign, and the regency of that part of the
-island was entrusted to Tootuhah, the youngest
-brother of the deposed chief.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="pomare-the-royal-family-of-tahiti">
-<h1>POMARE, THE ROYAL FAMILY OF TAHITI</h1>
-<p>The Pomare family are descendants of chiefs
-called Tu of Faaraoa, one of the atoll islands
-of the Paumotu Archipelago, some two hundred
-and fifty miles northeast of Tahiti. The exact
-date of the first Tu's arrival in Tahiti is unknown.
-Even the generation can not be fixed. The
-Pomares were always ashamed of their Paumotu
-descent, which they regarded as a flaw in their
-heraldry, and which was a reproach to them in
-the eyes of the Tahitians, for all Tahitians
-regarded the Paumotus as savage, and socially
-inferior. The first Tu who came to visit the
-distant land of Tahiti, came in by the Taunoa
-opening, which is the eastern channel, into what
-is now the harbor of Papeete. Landing at Taunoa
-a stranger, he was invited to be the guest of
-Manaihiti, who seems to have been a chief of
-Pare. He was adopted by the chief as his
-brother, and at the death of the chief, he
-became heir and successor in the chief's line.
-He married into the Arue family, which gave his
-son a claim to the joint chiefdom of Pare Arue;
-and at last his grandson, or some later
-generation, obtained in marriage no less a personage
-than Tetuaehuri, daughter of Taiarapu. One
-of the members of this family, Teu (born 1720,
-died 1802) made new and important advances
-in the social and political circles of Tahiti by
-marriage, and became the father of Pomare I.
-(1743-1803), the first king of Tahiti. Teu seems
-to have been a very clever and cautious man.
-He never assumed to be a great chief or to wear
-the belt of feathers. He was more jealous of his
-son than of Amo or his son Teriirere. His son,
-Tu, was born about 1743. Related by birth with
-two of the most influential families, he
-strengthened his native ties by marrying
-Tetuanui-rea-i-te-rai, of the adjoining independent chiefdom
-of Tefauai Ahurai, who was not only a niece of
-Purea, but quite as ambitious and energetic as
-Purea herself. The English, who could not
-conceive that the Tahitians should be able to
-exist without some pretense of royalty, gave Tu
-the rank and title of king, notwithstanding that
-he was only one, and at that not the most
-influential of several Arii rahi. To the great
-dissatisfaction of the other chiefs, Tu received the lion's
-share of presents from Captain Cook. At this
-action, the Ahurai and Attahura people were
-enraged, and Cook was quite unable to
-understand that they had reason to complain. To
-them, Cook's partiality for Tu must have seemed
-a deliberate insult. When Cook returned on his
-third voyage, in 1777, several Tahitian tribes
-were in a state of war with Moorea, in which Tu
-took no active part. Cook then deliberately
-intervened in the support of the plan he had
-adopted of elevating Tu at the expense of the
-other chiefs. In his estimation, Tu was king by
-divine right, and any attack on his authority was
-treason in the first place, and an attack on British
-influence in the next. British influence and
-British threats made a radical change in the
-government of Tahiti, in opposition to the
-expressed wish of the great majority of the people.
-England wanted to control the political affairs
-of the island for commercial gain, and to extend
-her sovereignty in the South Seas, which only
-confirms that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>All government—indeed, every human benefit and
-enjoyment, every virtue and every prudent act—is
-founded on compromise and barter.</p>
-<p>BURKE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image14">
-<img alt="PRINCE HINOI" src="images/Image14.jpg" style="width: 390.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">PRINCE HINOI Son of the last King of Tahiti, Pomare V.</p>
-</div>
-<p>After Cook's departure, nearly eleven years
-elapsed before another European ship called at
-Tahiti, and, during this time, Pomare paid dearly
-for the distinctions forced upon him by the
-foreigners. When Lieutenant Bligh arrived in the
-<em>Bounty</em>, in 1788, Tu told him that after five
-years from the time of Cook's last departure,
-the people of the island Moorea (Eirrieo) joined
-with those of Attahura and made an attack
-on his district, and many of his subjects were
-killed, while he had himself fled, with the
-survivors, to the mountains. All the houses and
-property had been destroyed or carried away by the
-enemy. Bligh landed at Matavai in the <em>Bounty</em>
-October 26, 1788. He came for a supply of
-breadfruit, which was to be introduced and
-domesticated in the various tropical colonies of Great
-Britain, and indirectly to advance the interests
-and power of Tu, who had nearly lost his
-influence over the natives. His position was so
-desperate that he begged the lieutenant to take him
-and his wife, Tetua, to England. He had a son,
-at this time six years old, who became the first
-Christian king of Tahiti. Before leaving the
-island, April 3, 1789, Bligh did what he could
-to strengthen Tu's position, and supplied him
-with firearms. For this act he gave the following
-explanation:</p>
-<blockquote>
-He (Tu) had frequently expressed a wish that I
-would leave some firearms and ammunition with him,
-as he expected to be attacked after the ship sailed, and
-perhaps chiefly on account of our partiality to him. I
-therefore thought it but reasonable to accede to his
-request. I was the more readily prevailed on, as he said
-his intentions were to act only on the defensive. This,
-indeed, seems most suited to his disposition, which is
-neither active nor enterprising. When I proposed to
-leave with him a pair of pistols, which they prefer to
-muskets, they told me that his wife, Tetua, would fight
-with one and Oedidee with the other. Tetua has learned
-to load and fire a musket with great dexterity, and
-Oedidee is an excellent marksman. It is not common
-for women in this country to go to war, but Tetua is a
-very resolute woman, of a large make, and has great
-bodily strength.</blockquote>
-<p>History shows that Tetua was not the only
-fighting woman in Tahiti, as at different times,
-in tribal wars, it was not uncommon for women
-to take an active part, and in more than one
-instance the leading part.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>On great occasions it is almost always women who
-have given the strongest proofs of virtue and devotion;
-the reason is, that with men, good and bad qualities
-are in general the result of calculation, whilst in
-women they are impulses, springing from the heart.</p>
-<p>COUNT MONTHOLON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Lieutenant Bligh left the island April 4th.
-As he was passing the Friendly, or Tonga group,
-April 28th, the larger part of his officers and men
-mutinied and set him and some eighteen others
-adrift in the ship's launch. The mutineers then
-put the ship about and returned to Tahiti, where
-they arrived at Matavai Bay, June 6, 1789. There
-they took in all the live-stock they could obtain,
-and twenty-four Tahitians, and sailed again June
-16th for Tubuai, but appeared once more,
-September 22nd, and landed sixteen of the mutineers,
-who were tired of their adventures. The rest
-sailed suddenly the next night, and vanished
-from the sight of men for twenty years. The
-sixteen mutineers who remained scattered more
-or less over the island, but made Pare their
-headquarters and Tu their patron. Here they set
-to work, November 12, 1789, to build a
-thirty-foot schooner, with which to make their escape.
-The effect of the example of these ruffians and
-criminals on the morals of the simple, receptive
-Tahitians can be readily imagined. These men,
-who had enjoyed the confidence of their
-commander and the advantages and pleasures of a
-trip to foreign strange countries, proved
-ungrateful, and &quot;the earth produces nothing worse
-than an ungrateful man&quot; (Ansonius). The
-schooner was launched August 5, 1790. The war
-which immediately followed, and which
-reestablished Tu in his power for the time, deserves to
-be called the War of the Mutineers of the <em>Bounty</em>.
-When Tu died, thirteen years later, the
-missionaries in their Journal recorded many details
-about his life and character, and among other
-things, they said:</p>
-<blockquote>
-He was born in the district of Oparre, where his
-corpse now is, and was by birth chief of that district,
-and none other. The notice of the English navigators
-laid the foundation for his future aggrandizement;
-and the runaway seamen that from time to time quitted
-their vessels to sojourn in the island (especially that
-of His Majesty's ship <em>Bounty's</em> crew, which resided
-here) were the instruments for gaining to Pomarre a
-greater extent of dominion and power than any other
-man had before in Otaheite.</blockquote>
-<p>It is very evident that the first Pomare was
-a man without firmness and that what influence
-he exercised was due to the energies and ambition
-of his wife and to foreign support. When
-Lieutenant Bligh reached home and reported the
-mutiny, the British government sent the frigate
-<em>Pandora</em> in search of the <em>Bounty</em> and the deserted
-crew. The <em>Pandora</em> never found the <em>Bounty</em>,
-which long since had been burned by the
-mutineers at Pitcairn Island; but she did find such of
-the mutineers as had returned to Tahiti, and who
-were actively engaged in establishing Tu as a
-Tahitian despot, when the <em>Pandora</em>, in March,
-1791, appeared in Matavai Bay. The mutineers,
-it seems, unable to keep at sea in the rickety
-schooner, landed at Papara, March 26th, and took
-refuge in the mountains. Captain Edwards, of
-the <em>Pandora</em>, immediately sent two boats, with
-a number of men, to Papara. Through the
-friendly office of the chiefs and natives, the
-mutineers were finally captured, one by one,
-until only six remained out, and these were at
-last found near the seashore, where they were
-captured after many fruitless attempts. The
-<em>Pandora</em> sailed from Tahiti with her prisoners in
-May, 1791, and in December following, Vancouver
-arrived in the sloop of war <em>Discovery</em>, on a search
-for a northwest passage to the Orient, stopping
-for supplies at Tahiti, December 28th.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image15">
-<img alt="A TAHITIAN HOME" src="images/Image15.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 330.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">A TAHITIAN HOME</p>
-</div>
-<p>Vancouver, who had been with Cook in 1777,
-inquired for his old friends. He learned that the
-young king had taken the name of Otoo, and his
-old friend that of Pomare, having given up his
-name with his sovereign jurisdiction, though he
-still seemed to retain his authority as regent.
-This is the first record of the name Pomare, by
-which the family has since been known. After
-the birth of the young Tu, about 1782, the first
-of his children who was allowed to live, the
-father seems to have taken the name of Tuiah,
-or Tarino, which he bore in 1788. He took the
-name of Pomare (night cough) from his younger
-son, Terii nava horoo, a young child in 1791, who
-coughed at night. With the assistance of
-English guns, Pomare waged active war on
-neighboring chiefs, and the chief of Papara was the last
-one to succumb. By successive vigorous strokes,
-he finally gained control of the entire group of
-islands, including Borabora.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="missionary-rule">
-<h1>MISSIONARY RULE</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>It is better that men should be governed by
-priestcraft than violence.</p>
-<p>LORD MACAULEY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The early missionaries of Tahiti played an
-important role in the island politics. They did
-not limit their work to the conversion of the
-heathen islanders, but took an active part in
-political affairs, and many of their doings in that
-direction were not in accord with the teachings of
-the gospel. The first missionaries sent to Tahiti
-from England reached the island in the <em>Duff</em>,
-March, 1797. They received information of the
-island politics from two Swedish sailors, Andrew
-Lind, of the ship <em>Matilda</em>, which had been
-wrecked in the South Sea in 1792, and Peter
-Haggerstein, who deserted from the <em>Daedalus</em>
-in February, 1793. Both of these men were
-adventurers of the type that has infested the
-South Seas for more than a century. They
-became well-known characters in the history of
-the island, sometimes assisting the
-missionaries, and sometimes annoying them. In July,
-1797, Peter accompanied one of the missionaries
-as a guide and interpreter, on a circuit round the
-island, to make a sort of census, as a
-starting-point for the missionary work. They began with
-Papenoo, July 11th, and as they walked, Peter
-boasted of his exploits. His stories were so much
-in conflict with facts that they rather misled
-than aided the missionaries in search of island
-affairs. Temarii, the chief of Papara, had
-visited the missionaries at Matavai. The
-missionaries gave the following account of him:</p>
-<blockquote>
-May 7, 1797, visited by the chief priest from Papara,
-Temarre. He was dressed in a wrapper of Otaheitian
-cloth, and over it an officer's coat doubled around
-him. At his first approach he appeared timid, and
-was invited in. He was just about seated when the
-cuckoo clock struck and filled him with astonishment
-and terror. Old Pyetea had brought the bird some
-breadfruit, observing it must be starved if we never
-fed it. At breakfast we invited Temarii to our repast,
-but he first held out his hand with a bit of plantain
-and looked very solemn, which, one of the natives said,
-was an offering to Eatooa (Tahitian divinity) and we
-must receive it. When we had taken it out of his hand
-and laid it under the table, he sat down and made a
-hearty breakfast. Brother Cover read the translated
-address to all these respected guests, the natives
-listening with attention, and particularly the priest, who
-seemed to drink in every word, but appeared
-displeased when urged to cast away their false gods, and
-on hearing the names of Jehovah and Jesus he would
-turn and whisper. Two days afterwards, Temarii came
-again to the mission house and this time with the young
-Otoo, Pomare H., and his first wife Tetuanui.</blockquote>
-<p>Here again is the account of the visit by the
-missionaries:</p>
-<blockquote>
-May 9th, Temarre accompanied the king and queen
-and staid to dine with us. He is, we find, of the royal
-race and son of the famed Oberea. He is the first chief
-of the island after Pomarre, by whom he has been
-subdued, and now lives in friendship with him and has
-adopted his son. He is also high in esteem as a priest.</blockquote>
-<p>In July of the same year the missionaries
-visited Temarii at Papara on their way around
-the island. They found the chief under the
-influence of Kava, but were feasted the next day on
-Temarii's feast pig. Not only was Temarii the
-most powerful chief of the island, but Pomare
-had become, by his son's accession, a chief of
-the second order. He depended greatly on the
-favor of his son, the young Tu, who was, in 1797,
-supposed to be at least fifteen and perhaps
-seventeen years of age, and who had been adopted
-by Temarii, his cousin, who was about ten years
-older than he. Adoption was rather stronger in
-the South Seas than the tie of natural parentage.
-Between his natural father, Pomare, and his
-adopted father, Temarii, the young Tu preferred
-the latter, and sooner or later every one knew
-that Temarii would help Tu to emancipate
-himself and drive Pomare from the island.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image16">
-<img alt="TAHITIAN BAMBOO HOUSE" src="images/Image16.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 334.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITIAN BAMBOO HOUSE</p>
-</div>
-<p>The <em>Duff</em> sailed for England August 14, 1797,
-leaving the missionaries to the mercies of rival
-factions, and they soon ascertained that Pomare
-and Tu were on anything but friendly terms.
-The missionaries had faith in Pomare, who chose
-one of them by the name of Cover as a brother.
-Temarii chose another by the name of Main.
-These two missionaries went to Papara August
-15th, at the suggestion of the influential native
-priest, Manne Manne, to remonstrate against
-a human sacrifice which was to be made at the
-Marae Tooarai. On account of a murder
-recently committed, the missionaries found the
-chief and people greatly excited, and fled as
-quickly as possible.</p>
-<p>In the month of March the missionaries found
-themselves in a critical condition when the ship
-<em>Nautilus</em> appeared and two of her crew deserted.
-The deserters went to Pare and were sheltered
-there. The captain of the <em>Nautilus</em> at once set
-to work to recover them. Four of the
-missionaries proceeded to Pare to see Tu, Pomare and
-Temarii and informed them that a refusal to
-return the men would be regarded as exhibiting
-an evil intention against the missionaries. They
-found Tu and Temarii at Pare, but went to get
-Pomare to join them, when they were suddenly
-attacked and stripped by some thirty natives, who
-took their clothes and treated them rather
-roughly, but at last released them. They went to
-Pomare's house and were kindly received.
-Pomare returned with them to Tu, and insisted
-on the punishment of the offenders and the
-delivery of the deserters. Two were executed, and
-the district of Pare took up arms to avenge them.
-Tu joined his father and suppressed the riot, so
-that the missionaries' clothes cost the natives
-fifteen lives before order was restored. This
-incident made the missionaries very unpopular and
-they had to depend more than ever on Pomare
-for protection.</p>
-<p>On August 24th, two whaling vessels, the
-<em>Cornwall</em> and <em>Sally</em>, of London, anchored in
-Matavai Bay, and most of the principal chiefs
-went on board. On the 30th, while the
-missionaries were at dinner, Pomare came in great haste,
-and told them that a man had been blown up
-with gunpowder at the Council house in Pare,
-and requested them to hasten to the place and
-render assistance. When they arrived they found
-that the injured man was Temarii. Here is the
-account of the affair by the missionaries:</p>
-<blockquote>
-At our arrival we were led to the bed of Temaree
-called also Orepiah, and beheld such a spectacle as we
-had never before seen. Brother Broomhall began
-immediately to apply what he had prepared with a
-camel's-hair brush over most parts of the body. He
-was apparently more passive under the operation than
-we could conceive a man in his situation would be
-capable of. The night drawing on, we took leave of him
-by saying we would return next morning with a fresh
-preparation. On the following morning we were
-struck with much surprise at the appearance of the
-patient He was literally daubed with something like a
-thick white paste. Upon inquiry we found it to be the
-scrapings of yams. Both the chief and his wife seemed
-highly offended at Brother Broomhall's application the
-preceding evening, and they would not permit him to
-do anything more for him, as he had felt so much pain
-from what he had applied. It was said that there was
-a curse put into the medicine by our God.</blockquote>
-<p>It must be remembered that the Tahitian
-chiefs were also priests and not infrequently
-acted as physicians. The dissatisfaction of
-Temarii with the treatment of his case by the
-missionaries had therefore to be considered as a
-most unfortunate affair. Under these conditions
-the missionaries were apprehensive of
-increasing hostilities. The suspicion on part of the
-superstitious natives that the missionaries had
-been sent by Pomare to curse Temarii and cause
-his death was not only a natural but a reasonable
-one to the chief as well as his subjects. Pomare
-was quite capable of such conduct and as far
-as the natives knew, the missionaries were
-Pomare's friends and supporters. The accident
-which gave rise to this unfortunate occurrence
-was due to the English gunpowder and it was
-fortunate that the missionaries had nothing to
-do with furnishing it. The explosion occurred
-while Temarii was testing the quality of powder
-which he obtained from the whalers <em>Cornwall</em>
-and <em>Sally</em>.</p>
-<blockquote>
-A pistol was loaded and unthinkingly fired in the
-midst of a number of people, over the whole quantity
-(five pounds) of powder received. A spark of fire
-dropped from the pistol upon the powder that lay on
-the ground, and in a moment it blew up. The natives
-did not feel themselves hurt at first, but when the
-smoke was somewhat dispersed, observing their skin
-fouled with powder, they began to rub their arms, and
-found the skin peeling off under their fingers. Terrified
-at this, they instantly ran to a river near at hand and
-plunged themselves in.</blockquote>
-<p>Temarii lingered in great suffering till
-September 8th, but the missionaries did not dare to
-visit him again for fear of violence on the part of
-the indignant natives. The whole body of chiefs
-was present and looked on in consternation while
-Temarii died. The chief's remains were carried,
-in the usual state, round the island to all his
-districts and duly mourned; and in the regular
-course prescribed by the island ceremonial, his
-head was secretly hidden in the cave at Papara.
-These demonstrations served to spread the news
-of the calamity, for which the missionaries
-received the exclusive blame. The political
-complications which followed induced Pomare to
-seek safety in flight to the Paumotu Islands,
-leaving his wife to face the storm. The chiefess
-was not idle after her husband's cowardly flight.
-On the 29th of November she compromised with
-Tu by ceding to him the authority he wanted, and
-obtained from him a pledge assuring her safety.
-This guaranty was the life of the high priest, old
-Manne Manne, Tu's best friend. He was
-murdered by Tetuanui's people on his way from
-Matavai to Pare. The chiefess was in the
-missionaries' house when this news arrived. She
-had a cartridge-box around her waist and a
-musket near at hand. She shook hands in a
-friendly manner with the Swede, saying unto
-him, &quot;It is all over,&quot; meaning the war, and
-immediately returned to her home. Pomare gained
-nothing by these dissensions, for he had nothing
-to gain, but had to sacrifice a part of his
-possessions. The only winner in this tragic game was
-the worst and most bloodthirsty of all, Tu, the
-first Christian king. It must be remarked that
-this king was the creation of the English, and
-that he was used as a tool in the hands of the
-missionaries. The Europeans came, and not only
-upset all the moral ideas of the natives, but also
-their whole political system. Before European
-influence made itself felt in Tahiti, whenever a
-chief became intolerably arrogant or dangerous,
-the other chiefs united to overthrow him. All
-the wars that are remembered in island traditions
-were caused by the overweening pride, violence
-or abnormal ambition of the great chiefs of
-districts, and always ended in correcting existing
-evils and in restoring the balance of power.</p>
-<p>The English came just at the time when one
-of these revolutions was in progress. The whole
-island had united to punish the chiefess of Papara
-for outrageous disregard of the island courtesies
-which took the place of international law between
-great chiefs. Purea had taken away the symbol
-of sovereignty she had assumed for her son, and
-had given it for safe-keeping to the chief of
-Paea. The natives and chiefs had recognized
-the chief of Pare, Arue, as entitled to wear the
-Maro-ura, which Purea had denied him by
-insulting his wife. Then the chief of Paea had tried
-to imitate Purea and assert supreme authority,
-only to be in his turn defeated and killed.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image17">
-<img alt="TOMB OF THE LAST KING OF TAHITI" src="images/Image17.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 377.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">TOMB OF THE LAST KING OF TAHITI, POMARE V.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Probably Tu would never have attempted a
-similar course if the English had not insisted on
-recognizing and treating him as king of the
-whole island. He was one of the weakest of the
-chiefs and enjoyed little if any reputation as a
-military power. The other chiefs would have
-easily kept him in his proper place if the English
-had not constantly supported him and restored
-him to power when he was vanquished. English
-interference and the assistance of the
-missionaries prolonged his ambition and caused the
-constant revolutions which gave no chance for the
-people to recover from the losses. Pomare was
-a shrewd politician and with the assistance of
-English guns finally gained control over the
-whole island, crushing tribal rule, the safeguard
-of the people under his despotic rule. All
-visitors to the island became aware how
-desperately the unfortunate people struggled against
-the English policy of creating and supporting a
-tyranny. The brutality and violence of Tu made
-him equally hated by his own people of Pare
-and by the Teva districts. Of these facts the
-missionaries had full knowledge, as is evident
-from their numerous correspondents,
-nevertheless, they assisted him in carrying out his plans
-to gain control over the entire island. They
-supplied him freely with firearms and
-ammunition. To preserve peace the missionaries did
-some very curious things which suggest, as they
-hinted, that they were glad to see the natives
-fighting together, as is evident from one of their
-daily records:</p>
-<blockquote>
-August 20, 1800.—We hear great preparations are
-making, whether for war or peace is to be determined
-in a short time, by some heathenish divination. If it
-should prove for war, those who are eager for blood
-seem determined to glut themselves, we rejoice that the
-Lord of Hosts is the God of the heathen as well as the
-Captain of the Armies of Israel; and while the
-potsherds of the earth are dashing themselves to pieces one
-against the other, they are fulfilling his determinate
-counsels and foreknowledge.</blockquote>
-<p>In the month of June Pomare instituted a
-wholesale massacre to subject the entire island
-to his rule, and by brutal force gained the object
-of his ambition. In 1808 the political situation
-was such that the missionaries found it necessary
-for their safety to leave the island, and fled with
-Pomare, November 12th, to the island of Moorea.
-Pomare's cruelties and atrocities practiced upon
-the natives during his tyrannical rule are well
-described in a pen-picture drawn by Moerenhout:</p>
-<blockquote>
-After having massacred all whom they had surprised
-(in Attahura), after having burned the houses, they
-went on to Papara, where Tati, who is still living (1837),
-was chief; but fortunately a man who had escaped from
-the carnage of Punaauia came to warn the inhabitants
-of Papara, so that they had time, not to unite in
-defense, but to fly. Nevertheless, in that infernal night
-and the day following a great number of persons
-perished, especially old men, women and children; and
-among the victims were the widow and children of
-Aripaia (Ariifaataia) Amo's son, who, surprised the next
-evening near Taiarahu, were pitilessly massacred with
-all their attendants. Tati and some of his warriors
-succeeded in reaching a fort called Papeharoro, at
-Mairepehe; but they were too few to maintain themseives
-there, and were forced to take refuge in the most
-inaccessible parts of the high mountains, from whence
-this chief succeeded in getting to a canoe which some
-of his faithful followers provided for him, and kept in
-readiness on the shore, at the peril of their lives. With
-him were his brother and his young son, whom he
-had himself carried in his arms during all this time of
-fatigue and dangers.</blockquote>
-<p>Opuhara became chief of Papara, and soon
-afterward chief of the island, and remained the
-chief personage of Tahiti during the next seven
-years. Ellis, the historian of the missionaries,
-described him as an intelligent and interesting
-man.</p>
-<p>At Moorea, Pomare's friends were
-Paumotuans, Boraborans, Raiateans, missionaries, and
-outcasts. Even these at last abandoned him.
-The missionary journal shows that they had
-long regarded their work as a failure, and after
-identifying themselves with Pomare, in spite of
-emphatic warnings, no other result was possible.
-So the missionaries, leaving only Mr. Nott at
-Moorea, sailed for Australia, not daring to
-accept the proffered protection of the Tahiti
-chiefs, because they could not separate
-themselves, in the minds of the common people, from
-Pomare and his interests. At Moorea, Pomare
-urged the visiting chiefs to become Christians.
-On the 18th of July, 1812, he announced his own
-decision to the missionaries, and shortly
-afterwards, on invitation from his old district of Pare
-Arue, he returned to Tahiti, where he was
-permitted to remain for two years, as an avowed
-Christian, unmolested by his old enemies. He
-took up his residence at Pare Arue as a Christian
-chief, August 13, 1812, and kept up a
-correspondence with the missionaries at Moorea.</p>
-<p>The missionaries returned and were more
-successful in Christianizing the people. On the
-17th of February, 1813, Pomare wrote: &quot;Matavai
-has been delivered up to me. When I am
-perfectly assured of the sincerity of this surrender
-I will write to you another letter.&quot; The
-missionaries made a tour of the island; many
-conversions took place; in Moorea several idols were
-publicly burned; there could be no doubt that
-the Christians were pursuing an active course,
-and that their success would bring back the
-authority of Pomare over the whole island; but
-neither Opuhara nor Tati interfered, and the
-peace remained. Yet, after waiting two years
-at Pare, vainly expecting the restoration of his
-government, and endeavoring to recover his
-authority in his hereditary districts, Pomare
-returned to Moorea in the autumn of 1814,
-accompanied by a large train of adherents and
-dependents, all professing Christianity. At the
-same time the Christian converts in Tahiti
-became an organization known as the Bure Atua,
-and every one could see that Pomare was making
-use of them, and of his wife's resources, to begin
-a new effort to recover by force his authority
-in the island. War was inevitable, and Pomare,
-with his Christian followers and missionaries,
-could choose the time and place.</p>
-<p>Pomare himself was not a soldier, nor had he
-anything of a soldierly spirit. He left active
-campaigning to his wives, who were less likely
-to rouse the old enmity. His two wives, Terite
-and Pomare vehine, came over to Pare Arue
-May, 1815, with a large party of Christians,
-and urged their plans for the overthrow of the
-native chiefs. The chiefs had no other alternative
-than to get rid of them, and fixed the night of
-July 7th for the combined attack. Opuhara led
-the forces, and it is said that he had given the
-two queens timely warning to effect their escape.
-For his delay some of the other chiefs charged
-him with treachery. He replied that he wished
-no harm to the two women or their people; that
-his enemies were the Parionuu; and he marched
-directly into Pare Arue, and subdued it once
-more.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image18">
-<img alt="TAHITIAN WOMEN" src="images/Image18.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 375.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITIAN WOMEN IN ANCIENT NATIVE DRESS</p>
-</div>
-<p>While Pomare and the missionaries grew
-stronger, and, as Ellis expressed it, &quot;became
-convinced that the time was not very remote when
-their faith and principles must rise preeminent
-above the power and influence&quot; of the native
-chiefs, the chiefs themselves exhibited vacillation.
-Pomare returned, with all his following,
-apparently armed and prepared for war. The native
-converts were trained to the use of firearms and
-the whole missionary interest became, for the
-moment, actively militant. The native chiefs
-remained passive. Under the appearance of
-religious services, Pomare and the missionaries
-kept their adherents under arms and prepared
-them for any hostilities that might arise.</p>
-<p>With his army numbering eight hundred, two
-war canoes, one manned with musketeers, the
-other with a swivel gun in the stern, commanded
-by a white man, Pomare, on November 11th,
-took possession at or near the village of Punaauia,
-near Papara, with pickets far in advance.
-Opuhara hastily summoned his men in the
-famous battle of Fei-pi (the ripe plantains). The
-field of battle was among the foothills near the
-coast. Opuhara's warriors made a valiant attack
-and pierced the front ranks of the enemy till it
-reached the spot where one of the queens, Pomare
-vehine, and the chief warriors stood. There one
-of the native converts leveled his gun at Opuhara,
-fired, the chief fell, and in a very short time
-expired. The leader of the native forces was
-killed by one of his own people who had cast
-his lot with Pomare and the missionaries.</p>
-<p>This war was brought on to force the natives
-to Pomare's rule, and not for the purpose of
-removing obstacles to the Christianization of the
-islanders, as the chiefs were not opposed to the
-peaceable dissemination of the teachings of the
-gospel. It was a political and not a religious war,
-and in this political endeavor the missionaries
-and their converts took the leading part. The
-missionaries evidently forgot the legitimate
-object of their mission and unmercifully
-slaughtered the natives who took up arms to defend
-their rights. The Christians on Pomare's side
-were fighting for supremacy, unmindful of the
-teachings of the sacred Scriptures.</p>
-<blockquote>
-For he shall have judgment without mercy, that hath
-showed no mercy; and mercy rejoiceth against
-judgment St. James ii: 13.</blockquote>
-<p>When Opuhara fell, his men lost courage,
-retreated, and were not pursued. The death of
-Opuhara was deeply regretted by Tati, his near
-relative and successor in the government of the
-district. In the ranks of his followers it was
-firmly believed Opuhara, few as his forces were,
-would have vanquished the enemy, had not the
-native missionaries been taught to shoot as they
-were taught to pray, and been supplied with guns
-along with Bibles. With the death of Opuhara
-the last hope of the natives was dissipated and
-submission to Pomare's rule became a stern
-reality. Neither the missionaries nor the natives
-had any idea of allowing Pomare to recede into
-his old ways. They made him refrain from
-massacre or revenge after the battle of Fei-pi. Tati,
-the chief of Papara, maintained peace from that
-time by his wise rule in that part of the island.
-He began by the usual island custom of binding
-Pomare to him by the strongest possible ties.
-The rapid extinction of chiefly families in Tahiti
-had left the head chief of Moorea heir to most of
-the distinguished names and properties in both
-islands. Marama, the head chief of Moorea, had
-only one heir, a daughter, a relative of Pomare.
-This great heiress, almost the last remnant of
-the three or four sacred families of the two
-islands, was given by Pomare in marriage to
-Tati's son, immediately after Tati himself was
-restored to his rights as head chief of the Tevas.
-In doing so he claimed for his own the first child
-that Marama (the bride) should have and made
-at the same time a compact that the children
-from the marriage should marry into the Pomare
-family. These conditions were made to render
-himself more influential with the most refractory
-of the conquered tribes. Pomare II. died
-December 7, 1821, leaving a daughter, Aimata, and
-a son, Pomare III., a child in arms. Aimata was
-never regarded with favor by Pomare, her father,
-who was frank in saying that she was not his
-child; so the infant son was made heir to the
-throne. Moerenhout made the statement that
-Pomare, on his deathbed, expressed the wish that
-Tati should take the reins of the government in
-his hands, but that the missionaries and other
-chiefs were afraid to trust Tati, and preferred to
-take the charge of the infant king on themselves.
-The missionaries in due time went through the
-formal ceremony of crowning the infant, April
-22, 1824, at Papara, and then took him to their
-school, the South Sea Academy, which was
-established in March, 1824, in the island of Moorea at
-Papetoai. There he was taught to read and
-write, and educated in English, which became his
-language, until he was seven years old, when he
-fell ill, and was taken over to his mother at Pare,
-where he died January 11, 1827. During the
-reign of the infant king, Mata, a friend of the
-family, managed the affairs of state and became
-the guardian of Aimata, as the Queen, Pomare
-IV., was always called by the natives. Aimata
-was married at the age of nine years. She led an
-unhappy life, domestic, political, private and
-public, until at last the missionaries, English and
-French, fought so violently for control of her and
-the island that she was actually driven away.</p>
-<p>Among other laws which were supposed to
-have been passed through the influence of the
-English missionaries, to prevent strangers from
-obtaining influence in the island, was one dated
-March 1, 1833, forbidding strangers, under any
-pretext, from marrying in Tahiti or Moorea.
-Ariitaimai, of noble birth, the historian of Tahiti,
-was not inclined to marry a native chief, a
-decision which met the approval of Marama, her
-mother. She finally consented to become the wife
-of Mr. Salmon, an Englishman, who was held in
-high esteem and consideration in the island; and
-Aimata suspended the law in order to enable her
-friend to be married to the man of her choice.
-The missionaries virtually ruled the island for
-forty years.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="wars-between-protestant-and-catholic-missionaries">
-<h1>WARS BETWEEN PROTESTANT AND CATHOLIC MISSIONARIES</h1>
-<p>In 1836 two French missionary priests landed
-at Tahiti to convert, not pagans, but Protestants
-to the Roman Catholic faith. The Protestant
-missionaries, who held the reins of the
-government, indignant at this interference, invoked the
-aid of the British consul, Pritchard, who caused
-the Queen to order their arrest and expulsion.
-The order was executed December 12, 1836.
-The two priests made a protest to their
-government, and King Louis Philippe sent a frigate to
-Papeete with the usual ultimatum, to which the
-Queen naturally acceded. Then began a struggle
-on the part of Consul Pritchard and the English
-missionaries to recover their ground, which led
-to a letter from Queen Pomare to Queen Victoria,
-suggesting a British protectorate, whereupon the
-French government sent another warship to
-Tahiti, in 1839, and made Aimata repeat her
-submission. As the British government at that
-time did not take much interest in missionaries,
-and Sir Robert Peel had a very precise knowledge
-of the value of unclaimed islands all over the
-world, Queen Victoria did not accept the
-proposition made by the Tahitian Queen, and the
-missionaries were again thrown on their own
-resources.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image19">
-<img alt="TAHITI GIRLS" src="images/Image19.jpg" style="width: 395.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITI GIRLS IN NATIVE DRESS</p>
-</div>
-<p>The chiefs ignored the missionaries, and in
-September, 1841, decided that, between such
-powers as England and France, they could not
-hope to maintain independence or even a good
-understanding, and since England refused the
-proffered protectorate, they would turn to
-France. So they drew up the necessary papers
-for the Queen to approve, but a British war
-vessel arrived in that critical moment, and this
-reenforcement of British interests induced the
-vacillating Queen to refuse to sign them. The next
-August another French naval force arrived, and
-the chiefs again met in council, with the admiral's
-aid and advice. The chiefs sent the following
-letter to the French admiral, Du Petit—Tuhouars:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Inasmuch as we can not continue to govern ourselves
-so as to live on good terms with foreign governments,
-and we are in danger of losing our island, our kingdom,
-and our liberty, we, the Queen and the high chiefs of
-Tahiti, write to ask the King of the French to take us
-under his protection.</blockquote>
-<p>In response to this formal request the French
-admiral, on September 30, 1842, hoisted the flag
-of the protectorate. This did not end the
-political and religious troubles of the little island.
-Consul Pritchard, who had been absent from his
-post for some time, returned from England
-February 23, 1843, and declared violent war against
-the French. As usual, Queen Pomare yielded to
-his wishes, and refused to obey those of the
-French admiral. The admiral lost his patience
-and temper, landed troops and took possession
-of the island, declared the Queen deposed, and,
-when disturbances arose, which he believed to be
-fomented and fostered by Pritchard, he arrested
-him and had him expelled from the island. This
-act excited much attention, both in the English
-and French press, which resulted in an order
-from the King of France to the admiral to restore
-the protectorate.</p>
-<p>It will be seen that the last wars of Tahiti
-were caused by a religious intolerance on the part
-of the English missionaries, who objected to the
-presence of two Roman Catholic priests in the
-island. European governments were appealed
-to and had to interfere in establishing in the
-island free religious thought. It was a fight
-between two religious denominations which kept
-the natives in a state of warfare, a most serious
-reflection on Christian charity,</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Alas for the rarity</p>
-<p>Of Christian charity</p>
-<p>Under the sun.</p>
-<p>HOOD.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The constant unrest of the islanders caused
-by outside interference provoked frequent
-rebellions, for &quot;general rebellions and revolts of an
-whole people never were encouraged, now or at
-any time; they are always provoked.&quot;</p>
-<p>The two priests, bent upon a humane mission,
-who, by their presence in Tahiti, without any
-fault of their own, incurred the enmity of the
-Protestant missionaries, were the direct cause of
-French intervention which resulted in the
-protectorate and later annexation of the island.
-The priests remained, new ones came, and
-today nearly one-half of the population of the island
-are members of the Roman Catholic church.</p>
-<p>The teachings and example of the English
-missionaries and their conduct toward the Catholic
-priests prove only too plainly:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Christian graces and virtues they can not be, unless
-fed, invigorated and animated by universal charity.</p>
-<p>ATTERBURY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image20">
-<img alt="NATIVE GIRLS" src="images/Image20.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 394.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">A GROUP OF NATIVE GIRLS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-last-war">
-<h1>THE LAST WAR</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Our country sinks beneath the yoke;</p>
-<p>It weeps, it bleeds, and each new day a gash</p>
-<p>Is added to her wounds.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The disturbances which preceded and followed
-the establishment of the French protectorate
-induced the Queen to seek safety on a British ship,
-and the whole Pomare following took up arms
-and established themselves in the stronghold of
-native power and influence near Papeete. Another
-civil war broke out which waged between the
-natives and Europeans from 1844 to 1845. Tired
-of foreign dictation and oppression, the natives
-fought with desperation. Forts, which remain
-today in a good state of preservation, were erected
-by natives and the French. Most of the ruins
-of these forts are scattered along the ninety-mile
-drive between Papeete and Papara. From time
-to time, determined attacks were made with
-varying fortunes of war. The natives were superior
-in number but could not stand up against the
-well-directed firearms of the professional soldiers.
-A last and crushing attack was ordered by the
-French admiral, which meant certain defeat for
-the natives.</p>
-<p>It was at this critical time that a woman came
-to the rescue of her people and prevented a
-wholesale slaughter of the heroic defenders of
-the island. This woman was Ariitaimai, the
-authoress of the book we have been following so
-closely in sketching the history of the island. She
-was the daughter of the famous Marama, of
-Moorea, the wife of Mr. Salmon, and the mother
-of Tati Salmon, the present chief of Papara. She
-recognized the hopelessness of the cause of her
-people and determined to prevent further useless
-bloodshed and establish peace. It required good
-judgment and a great deal of courage to
-undertake the task which she finally accomplished with
-such a brilliant success. She was one of those
-who believed that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Almost all difficulties may be got the better of by
-prudent thought, revolving and pondering much in the
-mind.</p>
-<p>MARCELLINUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>She was intensely patriotic and had no fear
-of the results of her daring mission. She was
-very popular with the natives and well known to
-the French authorities, which aided her very
-much in formulating and carrying out her plans.
-She had no time to lose, as the decisive attack
-on her countrymen had been ordered and was to
-take place the next day. She called on Bruaat,
-the governor of the island, with the determined
-intention to end the war. He granted her
-twenty-four hours to accomplish her task. She then
-called a meeting of the head chiefs and urged
-them to surrender on the conditions stipulated by
-the French, in view of the hopelessness of the
-island's cause. At that time this woman was
-the most conspicuous figure in the politics of the
-island, loved and respected by the chiefs and the
-people throughout Tahiti and Moorea. The
-head chiefs received her proposition with favor.
-Notable speeches complimentary to her were
-made on this occasion. One chief said:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Ariitaimai, you have flown amongst us, as it were,
-like the two birds, Ruataa and Toena. Your object was
-to join together Urarii and Mauu, and you have brought
-them into this valley. You have brought the cooling
-medicines of <em>vainu</em> and <em>mahainuieumu</em> into the hearts
-of the chiefs that are collected here. Our hearts yearn
-for you, and we can not in words thank you; but the
-land, one and all, will prove to you in the future that
-your visit will always remain in their memory. You
-have come personally. I have heard you speak the
-words out of your own mouth. You have brought us
-the best of all goods, which is peace. You have done
-this when you thought we were in great trouble, and
-ran the risk of losing our lives and property; you have
-come forward as a peacemaker for us all.</blockquote>
-<p>What beautiful thoughts in simple, homely
-language! What a splendid specimen of natural
-oratory!</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>In oratory, affectation must be avoided; it being
-better for a man by a native and clear eloquence to
-express himself than by those words which may smell
-either of the lamp or ink-horn.</p>
-<p>LORD HERBERT OF CHERBURY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The chiefs unanimously accepted the terms
-of peace, and after the adjournment of the
-council, Ariitaimai hastened to Papeete with the
-message of the chiefs, which was accepted, and
-once more the protectorate flag was raised
-and was recognized and respected by the chiefs
-and the people. During all these great final
-trials of the island, the Queen remained in the
-island of Moorea and even after peace was
-restored and she was formally requested to
-return, she refused to do so. The French
-authorities offered the crown repeatedly to Ariitaimai,
-but as often, she refused the great honor. The
-exiled Queen was her intimate and dear friend
-and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Ennuis has well remarked that &quot;a real friend is
-known in adversity.&quot;</p>
-<p>CICERO.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>She was content with having accomplished a
-patriotic deed and with the respect, love and
-gratitude of her people.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>So true it is, that honor, prudently declined, often
-comes back with increased lustre.</p>
-<p>LIVIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>She could say:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Give me a staff of honour for mine age;</p>
-<p>But not a sceptre to control the world.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Tis less to conquer than to make wars cease,</p>
-<p>And, without fighting, awe the world to peace.</p>
-<p>HALIFAX.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Ariitaimai made several visits to the unhappy
-Queen, urging her to return and resume her
-reign of the island, and had the satisfaction,
-finally, to bring her back from Raiatea on her
-third visit.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>True friends visit us in prosperity only when invited,
-but in adversity they come without invitation.</p>
-<p>THEOPHRASTUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The Queen, on her return, was received with
-regal honors by the French authorities and by
-the people.</p>
-<p>Pomare V. was the last of the kings of Tahiti.
-He was the oldest son of Queen Pomare IV. and
-known as Ariiane Pomare. He was married to
-Marau Taawa Salmon, Tati Salmon's sister, and
-had two daughters: Teriimii-o-Tahiti, and
-Arii mainhinihi. Under European influences and
-customs he became a degenerate Tahitian,
-profligate and dissipated, and it is said that he was
-largely responsible for the annexation of the
-island to France as a colony in 1880, as he
-received a substantial remuneration for his
-influence in that direction and a pension of sixty
-thousand francs a year. He died in 1891. Since
-Tahiti has become a French possession the island
-has enjoyed uninterrupted peace. The French
-government has been exceedingly liberal with the
-natives, having interfered as little as possible
-with their habits and customs.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>That is the best government which desires to make
-the people happy, and knows how to make them happy.</p>
-<p>MACAULEY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The island is governed under the French laws,
-but local laws and tribal rule remain and
-administer the local affairs. In completing the eventful
-history of this little island it becomes apparent:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>What is public history but a register of the successes
-and disappointments, the vices, the follies and quarrels
-of those engaged in the contention for power.</p>
-<p>PALEY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The government has established and enforced
-religious liberty, observing the precept: &quot;The
-protection of religion is indispensable to all
-government&quot; (Bishop Warburton). Taxation is
-limited to road tax only. The annexation was
-looked upon with great disfavor by the natives,
-but was finally accepted with good grace, and
-peace and happiness have reigned since.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-natives">
-<h1>THE NATIVES</h1>
-<p>The Polynesians inhabiting the islands of the
-great Pacific Ocean constitute a distinct race of
-people, supposed at one time by certain writers
-to be of American origin, now almost
-universally admitted to have a close affinity with the
-Malays of the peninsula and Indian Archipelago,
-and hence classified by Dr. Latham under his
-subdivision <em>Oceanica Mongolidæ</em>. In physical
-structure and appearance the Polynesians in
-general more nearly resemble the Malays than they
-do any other race, although differing from them
-in some respects, as, indeed, the natives of several
-of the groups also do from each other. Centuries
-and environment have left their impress on the
-inhabitants of the different islands, as</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Everything that is created is changed by the laws
-of man; the earth does not know itself in the revolution
-of years; even the races of man assume various forms
-in the course of years.</p>
-<p>MANILIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image21">
-<img alt="NATIVE GIRL" src="images/Image21.jpg" style="width: 387.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">NATIVE GIRL IN MODERN DRESS</p>
-</div>
-<p>In stature the Tahitian compares well with any
-other race. The face is expressive of more than
-ordinary intelligence. The color of the skin
-varies from almost black to a light yellow. The
-aquiline nose is commonly seen among them, and
-there are many varieties of hair and complexion.
-In complexion they resemble more nearly the
-Japanese than the Chinese. The beard is thin,
-the prevailing hair jet black, straight, wavy or
-curly, profuse and long; eyes large and black; no
-drooping or obliquity of eyelids. The face is
-generally roundish; lower jaw well developed;
-no unusual malar prominences; forehead slightly
-receding; mouth large, lips thick and as a rule
-slightly everted; wide nostrils; ears large; chin
-prominent. The general resemblance of stature
-and physiognomy, however, is more with the
-Malays than any other race, and from which they
-are undoubtedly the descendants, changed by
-climatic influences, food, habits and methods of
-living. In physical appearance the Tahitians and
-Samoans are the handsomest and tallest of all
-the natives of the Pacific Islands, with the
-exception, perhaps, of the Maoris, or New
-Zealanders.</p>
-<p>The superstition of the taboo, the use of kava
-as an intoxicating drink, cannibalism, infanticide,
-offering of human sacrifices, tattooing, and
-circumcision, which were formerly prevalent in
-Tahiti, have disappeared under the influence of
-Christianity.</p>
-<p>Much has been said about the beauty of some
-of the women of the South Sea Islands, but I
-am sure I do them no injustice if I say that these
-descriptions are overdrawn by sentimental writers
-and do not correspond, when put to the test of
-comparison, with the reality. When young, there
-is something fascinating about the women,
-imparted by the luxurious jet-black hair, the large
-black eyes as they gaze at the strangers</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>With a smile that is childlike and bland.</p>
-<p>FRANCIS BRET HARTE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Beauty and youth among the Tahitian women
-are of short duration, and in most of them
-advanced age brings an undesirable degree of
-corpulence.</p>
-<p>Cook visited these people when they were in
-their original physical and moral state. He
-praises their openness and generosity. &quot;Neither
-does care ever seem to wrinkle their brow. On the
-contrary, even the approach of death does not
-appear to alter their usual vivacity. I have seen
-them, when brought to the brink of the grave by
-disease, and when preparing to go to battle; but in
-neither case, never observed their countenance
-overclouded with melancholy, or serious
-reflection. Such a disposition leads them to direct
-all their aims only to what can give them pleasure
-and ease.&quot;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The whole countenance is a certain silent language
-of the mind.</p>
-<p>CICERO.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>These mental traits have been preserved up to
-the present time. Melancholy and suicide are
-almost unknown in Tahiti. The people are
-happy, contented and free from care and anxiety
-and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Enjoy the pleasures of the passing hour, and bid
-adieu for a time to grave pursuits.</p>
-<p>HORATIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>They seem to know that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Care and the desire for more</p>
-<p>Attend the still increasing store.</p>
-<p>HORATIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Desire for great wealth does not exist among
-the natives. Nature has supplied them with
-nearly all they need, hence little remains for
-them to do to meet their modest desires.</p>
-<p>Religion has not done away entirely with
-superstition, and has improved their morals little, if
-any. Old European residents of Papeete agree
-that the morality of the natives has not improved
-since they have been under the influence of
-civilization, forced on them by the European
-invaders. The greatest fault of the people is
-their incurable laziness, a vice for which they
-are not entirely responsible, as Nature has
-provided so bountifully for their needs. Robbery,
-stealing and murder are almost unknown; petty
-thefts, on the contrary, are quite common. The
-people, young and old, are affable, extremely
-courteous and hospitable to a fault; the family
-ties strong, and extending to the remotest
-relatives.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Man is a social animal, and born to live together so
-as to regard the world as one house.</p>
-<p>SENECA.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Nowhere in the world are the people more
-sociable than in Tahiti. This sociability was
-perhaps more pronounced before the island was
-discovered than it is now, but it remains to this
-day as one of the prominent characteristics of
-the Polynesian race. Respect and love for
-parents, strong attachments to relatives and friends,
-are striking virtues of the Tahitians. They love
-social intercourse and have the highest regard
-for friendship. Poverty and misfortunes do not
-intercept friendships, on the contrary they
-cement them more firmly.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The firmest friendships have been formed in mutual
-adversity; as iron is most strongly united by the
-fiercest flames.</p>
-<p>COLTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Before European influence had made itself felt
-in the island, each tribe constituted a large
-family, and property lines were not sharply defined.
-As long as there was anything to eat, no one
-was left hungry. The Tahitians are extremely
-fond of mingling with their relatives, friends,
-members of the same and other tribes. They
-appreciate to the fullest extent that &quot;we have
-been born to unite with fellow-men, and to join
-in community with the human race&quot; (Cicero).
-They treat old age with reverence and respect,
-and take the very best care of the sick and poor.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Unity of feelings and affections is the strongest
-relationship.</p>
-<p>PUBLIUS SYRUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image22">
-<img alt="TAHITIAN LADIES" src="images/Image22.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 382.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITIAN LADIES IN ZULU DRESS</p>
-</div>
-<p>Under the teachings of the missionaries,
-Protestant and Catholic, paganism has
-disappeared from the island. All are church-members
-and attend service regularly. The
-denominations represented are the Episcopalians,
-Catholics and Latter-day Saints in above numerical
-order. Most of the priests and preachers are
-natives. Christianity, has, however, failed to
-suppress immorality and do away entirely with
-the inborn superstition of the natives. The
-former evil is firmly rooted, the latter difficult of
-complete eradication.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Nothing has more power over the multitude than
-superstition: in other respects powerless, ferocious,
-fickle, when it is once captivated by superstitious
-notions, it obeys its priests better than its leaders.</p>
-<p>QUINTUS CURTIUS RUFUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Wicked habits are productive of vice, and vice
-follows long-standing habits. The Tahitians are
-by nature kind, affectionate, and their opinions
-are easily moulded for good or bad, but many of
-their customs and habits cling to them in spite of
-civilization and Christianization, for &quot;how many
-unjust and wicked things are done from mere
-habit!&quot; (Terentius); and &quot;so much power has
-custom over tender minds&quot; (Virgilius).</p>
-<p>The children of Tahiti are given excellent
-opportunities for obtaining a good elementary
-education. In all of the larger villages there is
-a government school, usually two churches.
-Catholic and Protestant, and their respective
-parochial schools. The natives love their
-language and are averse to the French, hence, as a
-rule, the parochial are better patronized than the
-government schools. The literature in the
-Tahitian language is limited to translations of
-the Bible, catechisms, religious song books and a
-few school books. Children of the better classes
-who seek a higher education, go abroad, in
-preference to the United States. Few show any
-ambition to enter any of the professions with the
-exception of the clerical. The mass of the people
-are content in leading an easy, dreamy life,
-showing no disposition either to acquire wealth
-or fame. Agriculture, manufacture and
-commerce have no attraction for them. They are
-children from the cradle to the grave, have the
-desires of children, and are pleased with what
-pleases children. Their tastes are simple, their
-desires few, and instead of in care and worry,
-they live through their span of life in peace of
-mind and contentment.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>But if men would live according to reason's rules,
-they would find the greatest riches to live content with
-little, for there is never want where the mind is
-satisfied.</p>
-<p>LUCRETIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In contrast to the Westerner, the favored
-Tahitian can say:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I have everything, yet have nothing; and although I
-possess nothing, still of nothing am I in want.</p>
-<p>TERRENCE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The natives are temperate in drinking, and
-frugal in eating. Fish and fruit are their
-principal articles of diet. Their habits in this
-direction have not undergone much change since
-Captain Cook wrote:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Their common diet is made up of at least
-nine-tenths vegetable food; and, I believe, more particularly,
-the <em>mahee</em>, or fermented breadfruit, which enters
-almost every meal, has a remarkable effect upon them,
-preventing a costive habit, and producing a very
-sensible coolness about them, which could not be
-perceived in us who fed on animal food. And it is,
-perhaps, owing to this temperate course of life that
-they have so few diseases among them.</blockquote>
-<p>Smoking is indulged in only to a moderate
-extent, cigarettes and pipe being the favorite
-methods of consuming the weed.</p>
-<p>Art has never had a place in the minds of
-the Tahitians. All attempts in this direction in
-design, carving and sculpture, are rude. Like
-all primitive peoples, they are fond of music.
-Their voices are sweet, but the airs of their
-music are monotonous. The primitive drum, and
-a little crude instrument made of bamboo,
-something like a flute, placed in one of the nostrils
-when played, are the instruments in most
-common use. The national dance, formerly the
-principal amusement of the people, is discouraged
-by the government, but is allowed once a year
-as a special favor to the natives.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="foreigners-in-tahiti">
-<h1>FOREIGNERS IN TAHITI</h1>
-<p>Most of the foreigners who remain
-permanently in Tahiti become attached to the island
-by marriage, the strongest possible incentive to
-make it their permanent home. Many of these
-men are adventurers. Some of them have honest
-intentions to make this beautiful island their
-permanent home. Far away from their place of
-birth and relatives, charmed by the beauties of
-the island, they conclude:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I will take some savage woman; she shall rear my
-dusky race.</p>
-<p>TENNYSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In many instances such unions have resulted
-very happily. On the voyage from San
-Francisco to Tahiti, I met Mr. George R. Richardson,
-a native of Springfield, Mass., who had lived for
-the last thirty years, with his native wife on the
-little atoll island, Kaukuaia of the Tuamotu group,
-one hundred and sixty-eight miles from Tahiti.
-He was suffering from carcinoma of the
-esophagus, and was returning from San
-Francisco, whither he had gone for medical advice.
-His parents were still living, but he had no
-desire to visit the place of his birth, so fully had
-he become acclimated to the climatic and native
-conditions of the Society Islands. He was then
-fifty-five years of age. He left the United States
-March 4, 1874, on a sailing vessel, and six months
-later landed at Tahxa. In six months he had
-obtained a fair knowledge of the native language,
-and married in Kaukuaia a woman who could not
-speak a word of English. This union resulted in
-sixteen children, three of whom died, six girls
-and seven boys living at the present time, and of
-these, three girls and two boys are married.
-Through his wife he inherited from her mother
-five acres of land with three thousand
-cocoanut-palms. To this land he obtained a legal
-ownership eight years ago by virtue of a law of legal
-registration passed by the government. The
-island on which he lives contains only one
-hundred and fifty inhabitants and the only income is
-obtained from copra and mother-of-pearl.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image23">
-<img alt="NATIVE MUSICIANS" src="images/Image23.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 426.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">NATIVE MUSICIANS AND NATIVE DANCE</p>
-</div>
-<p>The inhabitants of this island are Catholics and
-Mormons. A Catholic priest comes once a month
-to minister to the spiritual needs of the
-adherents to the faith of his church. The services of
-both denominations are conducted in the native
-language. He and a Frenchman are the only
-white inhabitants of the island.</p>
-<p>On February 16, 1878, a great storm
-overflooded the island and our American, who spent
-a whole night in the crown of a cocoanut tree,
-lost everything. Only five thousand cocoanut
-trees were left on the whole island. A
-man-of-war came from Tahiti three days later and
-ministered to the urgent needs of the survivors.</p>
-<p>The inhabitants of this little island suffer
-frequently from malaria and grippe. The
-latter disease returns regularly almost every
-year. Of the remaining diseases, diarrhea
-and dysentery are the most common.
-Tuberculosis is prevalent and claims many victims.
-This island has now a population of one
-hundred and fifty, and during his residence he
-has never seen a physician, although the
-inhabitants were frequently in need of medical
-services. He was obliged to render his wife
-assistance at the birth of all of his children, and
-strangely, each time without any mishap, either
-to mother or child. What happened on that
-island must have happened on the many other
-distant islands under similar circumstances. Here,
-like elsewhere, in the South Sea Islands, are
-medicine-men who attend to tooth-pulling, and,
-when any cutting is to be done, a scalpel is made
-of a piece of glass. In case of sickness they make
-use of roots and herbs of their own gathering.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="business-in-tahiti">
-<h1>BUSINESS IN TAHITI</h1>
-<p>The Tahitian is not a business man. What little
-business is transacted in the island is done by
-foreigners. The larger stores in Papeete are
-owned and managed by French, Germans and
-Americans. The smaller stores in the city, and
-nearly all small shops in the villages, are in the
-hands of Chinamen.</p>
-<p>The fertile soil of Tahiti is not made use of to
-any considerable extent. The sugar industry has
-been tried but has been entirely abandoned, owing
-to high wages for labor and exorbitant freight
-rates. The principal articles of export are copra,
-cocoanuts, vanilla-beans and mother-of-pearl
-shells. Copra (dried meat of cocoanut), brings
-three cents a kilo and cocoanuts are sold at a
-cent apiece. The raising of vanilla-beans was a
-paying industry five years ago, when they
-commanded a price of seventeen dollars a pound, and
-were then eagerly sought for in the market, as
-they were considered superior in flavor to those
-of any other country. The Chinamen have ruined
-this source of income as well as the reputation of
-the product. These shrewd business men control
-the local market completely and go from place
-to place long before harvest-time, buy the whole
-crop for the year for cash, and have the beans
-picked before they are ripe and mature them
-artificially. The result of such dishonest
-transactions has been that, owing to the poor quality
-of the beans thus treated, the price of the article
-has been reduced to three or four dollars per
-pound.</p>
-<p>The vanilla-bean grows best in the shady
-forests, and requires but little attention except
-artificial fertilization of the flowers and picking
-of the beans. In the West Indies the numerous
-insects fertilize the monogamous flowers; in this
-island, this has to be done largely by artificial
-fecundation. Women and children do this work.
-With a sharp little stick, the pollen is taken from
-the anthers and rubbed over the stigma of the
-pistil. A child who is active can fertilize fifteen
-hundred flowers a day. It is a great pity that
-this industry has been cheapened by the
-avaricious Chinamen, as it is an industry that requires
-very little labor and should be remunerative, as
-the soil and climate are peculiarly well adapted
-for the cultivation of this valuable aromatic.</p>
-<p>Most of the fruit which grows in Tahiti is too
-perishable for transportation and is consequently
-very cheap. The largest and most luscious
-pineapples can be bought for three cents apiece,
-oranges one-fourth of a cent. Alligator pears,
-the finest fruit grown anywhere, are sold at the
-market for two and three cents apiece. At the
-time of my visit, eggs were sold at forty cents a
-dozen. Meat, with the exception of pork, is
-imported from New Zealand and the United States.
-Most of the native families raise hogs, and this
-animal is found also in a wild state in the jungles
-of the forests.</p>
-<p>The wages, for this island, are rather high. An
-ordinary laborer is paid seventy-five cents a
-day, and the women who are willing to work can
-earn fifty cents a day. The average Tahitian
-works only long enough to procure the
-necessities of life, and, as these are few, it is difficult
-to find men and women for ordinary labor and
-housework.</p>
-<p>The fact that there is no bank in the whole
-island shows that the amount of money which
-circulates among the people is very small. Some
-enterprising American attempted to establish a
-telephone line encircling the island, but lack of
-patronage soon paralyzed the undertaking. The
-island is a place for a dreamy, easy existence, and
-not for business.</p>
-<p>The communication with the outside world is
-carried on by two regular steamer lines, one
-from San Francisco, the other from Auckland,
-but both of these lines are supported by liberal
-government subsidies to make them remunerative,
-as the passenger traffic and the exports and
-imports of the island would not suffice to make them
-independent of government aid.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="old-tahiti">
-<h1>OLD TAHITI</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>What will not length of time be able to change?</p>
-<p>CLAUDIANUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Tahiti is exceedingly interesting to-day, but
-how much more so must it have been to Captain
-Wallis and his crew, who first set their eyes on
-this gem of the Pacific! When the <em>Dolphin</em>
-came in sight of this beautiful island that never
-before had been seen by a white man, we can
-readily imagine officers and crew straining their
-eyes to see first its rugged outlines, and later the
-details of the wonderful landscapes. Under the
-blue sky and lighted up by the vigorous rays of
-the tropic sun, they could see the mountain-peaks
-clothed in the verdure of a tropic forest, the
-little island set like a gem in the ocean, and, as
-they beheld these mountains and turned their
-eyes upward they could also see</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>They were canopied by the blue sky, so cloudless,
-clear, and purely beautiful that God alone was to be
-seen in heaven.</p>
-<p>BYRON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image24">
-<img alt="TAHITIAN GIRL" src="images/Image24.jpg" style="width: 349.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITIAN GIRL IN NATIVE FESTIVE DRESS</p>
-</div>
-<p>As they approached nearer and saw the natural
-wealth of the island and its happy inhabitants
-basking in the sunshine, eating what Nature had
-provided for them without care or toil on their
-part, they must have come to the unavoidable
-conclusion that they at last had found a land
-where</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>There was a never-ending spring, and flowers unsown
-were kissed by the warm western breeze. Then the
-unploughed land gave forth corn, and the ground, year
-after year, was white with full ears of grain. Rivers
-of milk, rivers of nectar ran, and the yellow honey
-continued to pour from the ever-green oak.</p>
-<p>OVIDIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>On landing, having overcome the animosity of
-the natives and ascertained the boundless
-resources of the island, they could not escape
-the conviction that they in their wanderings
-over the limitless sea, had at last found &quot;a heaven
-on earth&quot; (Milton).</p>
-<p>What wonderful stories those men must have
-brought to Europe on their return after the long
-and hazardous voyage, when they related what
-they had seen in Tahiti, then in its primitive
-native state! Captain Cook made a longer stay
-in the island on his first visit and had therefore
-a better opportunity to study the island, its
-resources and its interesting inhabitants. It is on
-his descriptions we will rely in giving an account
-of some of the traits, customs and habits of the
-people as they existed at that time.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="religion-of-the-natives">
-<h1>RELIGION OF THE NATIVES</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Every one is, in a small degree, the image of God.</p>
-<p>MANLIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The most primitive of all races have some
-conception of a divinity and a life hereafter, for</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>A god has his abode within our breast; when he
-rouses us, the glow of inspiration warms us; this
-holy rapture springs from the seeds of the divine mind
-sown in man.</p>
-<p>OVIDIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Let us listen to Captain Cook concerning the
-religion of the Tahitians before they knew the
-name of God and the story of the Saviour while
-on earth:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The common people have only a very vague idea of
-the religious sentiments of the race, but the priests,
-who are quite numerous, have established quite an
-extensive and somewhat complicated system. They
-do not worship one God, as possessing preeminence;
-but believe in a plurality of divinities, who are all
-supposed to be very powerful, and, as different parts
-of the island, and the other islands in the
-neighborhood, have different ones, the inhabitants of such,
-no doubt, think that they have chosen the most potent
-and considerate one. Their devotion in serving their
-gods is remarkably conspicuous. Not only the whattas
-or offering-places of the morals are commonly loaded
-with fruits and animals, but there are few houses
-lacking a small place of the same sort. Many of them
-are so impressed with their obligations to their divinity
-that they will not begin a meal without first laying
-aside a morsel for their Eatooa (their god).</p>
-<p>Their prayers are also very frequent, which they
-chant, much after the manner of songs, in their festive
-entertainments. They also believe in an evil spirit,
-they call Etee, who sometimes does them mischief,
-and to whom, as well as to their god, they make
-offerings.</p>
-<p>But the mischiefs they fear from any superior
-invisible beings are confined only to temporal things. They
-believe the soul to be both immaterial and immortal.
-They say that it keeps fluttering about the lips
-during the pangs of death, and that then it ascends and
-mixes with, or, as they express it, is eaten by the
-deity. In this state it remains for some time; after
-which it departs to a certain place destined for the
-reception of the souls of men, where it exists in eternal
-night, or, as they sometimes say, in twilight or dawn.
-They have no idea of any permanent punishment after
-death for crimes that they have committed on earth.
-They believe in the recognition of relatives and friends
-after death and in resuming the same relations as on
-earth. If the husband dies first, the soul of his wife is
-known to him on its arrival in the land of spirits. They
-resume their former acquaintance, in a spacious house,
-where the souls of the deceased assemble to recreate
-themselves with the gods. From here man and wife
-retire to their own habitation, where they remain
-forever.</p>
-<p>The most singular part of their faith consists in
-claiming that not only man, but all other animals, trees,
-fruit and even stones are endowed with a soul, which
-at death, or upon being consumed or broken, ascends
-to the divinity, with whom they first mix, and
-afterward pass into the mansion allotted to each.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The temples of the Tahitians were the maraes,
-enclosures of stones, where the offerings were
-rendered, and on certain occasions human beings
-were sacrificed. The largest marae ever built in
-Tahiti is located at Papara and the ruins of
-it remain to-day. At the time of Captain
-Cook's visit there were numerous maraes all over
-the island, which served as places of worship,
-sacrifice and burial. The supreme chief of the
-whole island was always housed in a marae and
-after his death the marae was appropriated to
-his family and some of the principal people. Such
-a marae differed little from the common ones,
-except in extent. Its principal part is a large,
-oblong pile of stones, lying loosely upon each
-other, about twelve or fourteen feet high,
-contracted towards the top, with a square area on
-each side, loosely packed with pebble stones,
-under which the bones of the chiefs are buried.
-At a little distance from the end nearest the sea is
-the place where the sacrifices are offered, which,
-for a considerable extent, is also loosely paved.
-There is here a very large scaffold, or whatta, on
-which the offerings, and other vegetables, are
-laid. But the animals are deposited on a smaller
-one, already mentioned, and the human
-sacrifices are buried under different parts of the
-pavement. The marae is the altar of other nations.
-The skulls of the human sacrifices, after a few
-months, are exhumed and preserved in the marae.</p>
-<p>Captain Cook counted forty-nine such skulls in
-the marae in which he witnessed the human
-sacrifice.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image25">
-<img alt="AT HOME" src="images/Image25.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 338.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">AT HOME</p>
-</div>
-<p>Cannibalism did not exist in Tahiti when the
-island was discovered, but human sacrifices were
-quite frequently offered as a kind of religious
-ceremony to appease the anger or displeasure of
-some offended god. The victims were tramps
-and persons of no vocation. They were either
-clubbed or stoned to death by persons designated
-for this purpose by the priests. On Saturday,
-August 30, 1777, while Captain Cook was
-stationed at Matavai for the purpose of observing
-the transit of Venus, he received a message that
-on the following day a human sacrifice would be
-made at Attahura, to Eatooa, to implore the
-assistance of the deity against the inhabitants of
-the island of Moorea, who were then in a state
-of war with Tahiti. Towha, a chief and relative
-of the then reigning king, had killed a man for
-the sacrifice. Captain Cook, with several friends,
-accompanied King Otoo to witness the ceremony,
-and describes the event in detail:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>On our way we landed upon a little island, which
-lies off Tettaha, where we found Towha and his retinue.
-After some little conversation between the two chiefs,
-on the subject of the war, Towha addressed himself
-to me, asking my assistance. When I excused myself,
-he seemed angry; thinking it strange I, who had always
-declared myself to be the friend of their island, should
-not go and fight against its enemies. Before we parted
-he gave to Otoo two or three red feathers, tied up in
-a tuft; and a lean, half-starved dog was put in a canoe
-that was to accompany us. We then embarked again,
-taking on board a priest who was to assist at the
-solemnity. As soon as we landed at Attahura, which
-was about two o'clock in the afternoon, Otoo expressed
-his desire that the seamen might be ordered to remain
-in the boat, and that Mr. Anderson, Mr. Webber and
-myself might take off our hats as soon as we should
-come to the marai, to which we immediately proceeded,
-attended by a great many men, and some boys, but not
-one woman. We found four priests and their
-attendants, or assistants, waiting for us.</p>
-<p>The dead body, or sacrifice, was in a small canoe
-that lay on the beach and partly in the water of the
-sea, fronting the marai. Two of the priests, with
-some of the attendants, were sitting by the canoe, the
-others at the marai. Our company stopped about
-twenty or thirty paces from the priests. Here Otoo
-placed himself; we, and a few others standing by him,
-while the bulk of the people remained at a greater
-distance. The ceremony now began. One of the
-priest's attendants brought a young plantain tree, and
-laid it down before Otoo. Another approached with
-a small tuft of red feathers, twisted on some fibres of
-the cocoanut husk, with which he touched one of the
-King's, feet and then retired with it to his companions.
-One of the priests, seated at the marai, facing those
-who were upon the beach, now began a long prayer;
-and, at certain times, sent down young plantain trees,
-which were laid upon the sacrifice. During this prayer,
-a man, who stood by the officiating priest, held in his
-hands two bundles, seemingly of cloth. One of them, as
-we afterward found, was the royal Maro; and the
-other, if I may be allowed the expression, was the
-ark of the Eatooa. As soon as the prayer was ended,
-the priests at the marai, with their attendants, went
-and sat down by those upon the beach, carrying with
-them the two bundles. Here they renewed their
-prayers, during which the plantain trees were taken,
-one by one, at different times, from off the sacrifice,
-which was partly wrapped up in cocoa-leaves and small
-branches.</p>
-<p>It was now taken out of the canoe and laid upon
-the beach, with the feet to the sea. The priests placed
-themselves around it, some sitting and others standing;
-and one, or more of them, repeated sentences for about
-ten minutes. The dead body was now uncovered,
-by removing the leaves and branches, and laid in a
-parallel direction with the seashore. One of the priests
-then, standing at the feet of it, pronounced a long
-prayer, in which he was, at times, joined by the others,
-each holding in his hand a tuft of red feathers. In
-the course of this prayer, some hair was pulled off the
-head of the sacrifice, and the left eye taken out; both
-of which were presented to Otoo, and wrapped up in
-a green leaf. He did not, however, touch it; but gave,
-to the man who presented it, the tuft of feathers, which
-he had received from Towha. This, with the hair and
-the eye, was carried back to the priests. Soon after,
-Otoo sent to them another piece of feathers, which he
-had given me in the morning to keep in my pocket.
-During some part of this last ceremony, a kingfisher
-making a noise in the trees, Otoo turned to me saying,
-&quot;That is the Eatooa;&quot; and seemed to look upon it to
-be a good omen.</p>
-<p>The body was then carried a little way, with its head
-toward the marai, and laid under a tree, near which
-were fixed three broad, thin pieces of wood, differently
-but rudely carved. The bundles of cloth were laid on
-a part of the marai, and the tufts of red feathers were
-placed at the feet of the sacrifice, round which the
-priests took their stations, and we were now allowed
-to go as near as we pleased. He seemed to be the
-chief priest who sat at a small distance, and spoke for
-a quarter of an hour, but with different tones and
-gestures; so that he seemed often to expostulate with
-the dead person, to whom he constantly addressed
-himself, and sometimes asked several questions, seemingly
-with respect to the propriety of his having been
-killed. At other times, he made several demands, as
-if the deceased either now had power himself, or
-interest with the divinity, to engage him to comply
-with such requests. Among the petitions we understood,
-he asked him to deliver Eimeo (Moorea), Maheine its
-chief, the hogs, women and other things of the island
-into their hands; which was, indeed, the express
-intention of the sacrifice. He then chanted a prayer, which
-lasted nearly half an hour, in whining, melancholy tone,
-accompanied by two other priests, and in which Potatou
-and some others joined. In the course of this prayer,
-some more hair was plucked by a priest from the head
-of the corpse, and put upon one of the bundles. After
-this, the chief priest prayed alone, holding in his hand
-the feathers which came from Towha. When he had
-finished, he gave them to another, who prayed in like
-manner. Then all the tufts of the feathers were laid
-upon the bundles of cloth, which closed the ceremony
-at this place.</p>
-<p>The corpse was then carried up to the most
-conspicuous part of the marai, with the feathers, the two
-bundles of cloth, and the drums, the last of which beat
-slowly. The feathers and bundles were laid against
-the pile of stones, and the corpse at the foot of them.
-The priests having again seated themselves round it,
-renewed their prayers, while some of their attendants
-dug a hole about two feet deep, into which they threw
-the unhappy victim, and covered it over with earth and
-stones. While they were putting him into the grave,
-a boy squeaked aloud and Omai (Captain Cook's
-interpreter) said that it was the Eatooa.</p>
-<p>The human sacrifice was followed by the offering of
-dogs and pigs. The many prayers and complicated
-ceremonies attending human sacrifice stamp it as a
-religious rite which has undoubtedly been practiced for
-centuries. In this particular instance it meant a message
-through the instrumentality of the unfortunate victim
-to implore Eatooa for assistance in the impending war
-with Moorea.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It is very interesting indeed to have an
-account of this ceremony preserved by an
-eyewitness like Captain Cook, and no apology is
-necessary here to have it reappear in all its
-minute details. Another religious ceremony of
-lesser import is circumcision. How this custom
-was introduced into Tahiti no one knows. It is
-more than probable that, in some way it came
-from the distant Orient in a modified form. It
-differs from the Jewish rite in that it is not
-performed on infants, but on boys approaching the
-age of puberty. Captain Cook gives the
-following description of the operation as he observed it:</p>
-<blockquote>
-When there are five or six lads pretty well grown
-up in a neighborhood the father of one of them goes
-to a Tahoua, or man of knowledge, and lets him know.
-He goes with the lads to the top of the hills, attended
-by a servant; and, seating one of them properly,
-introduces a piece of wood underneath the foreskin, and
-desires him to look aside at something he pretends is
-coming. Having thus engaged the young man's
-attention to another object, he cuts through the skin upon
-the wood, with a shark's tooth, generally at one stroke.
-He then separates, or rather turns back, the divided
-parts; and, having put on a bandage, proceeds to
-perform the same operation on the other lads. At the
-end of five days they bathe, and the bandages being
-taken off, the matter is cleaned away. At the end of
-five days more they bathe again, and are well; but a
-thickness of the prepuce, where it was cut, remaining,
-they go again to the mountains with the Tahoua and
-servant; and a fire being prepared, and some stones
-heated, the Tahoua puts the prepuce between two of
-them, and squeezes it gently, which removes the
-thickness. They then return home, having their heads and
-other parts of their bodies, adorned with odoriferous
-flowers, and the Tahoua is rewarded for his services
-by their fathers, in proportion to their several abilities,
-with presents of hogs and cloth; and if they be poor,
-their relations are liberal on the occasion.</blockquote>
-<p>How the wise man managed to keep the boys
-together during two such painful ordeals is not
-easy to understand, but as they remained at their
-posts until all had passed through it speaks
-volumes for their good behavior and manly courage.
-That the Tahitians possessed many admirable
-virtues during their paganism proves only too
-clearly that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Virtue is shut out from no one; she is open to all,
-accepts all, invites all, gentlemen, freedmen, slaves,
-kings and exiles; she selects neither house nor fortune;
-she is satisfied with a human without adjuncts.</p>
-<p>SENECA.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image26">
-<img alt="A HOME BY THE SEA" src="images/Image26.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 360.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">A HOME BY THE SEA–RAIATEA</p>
-</div>
-<p>These virtues, the prayers, the sacrifices, the
-belief in a supreme being and eternity, show
-that the Tahitians were imbued with a natural
-religion, for</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The existence of God is so many ways manifest and
-the obedience we owe Him so congruous to the light
-of reason, that a great part of mankind give testimony
-to the law of nature.</p>
-<p>LOCKE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The natives had no literature nor any
-communication with the outside world farther than
-the neighboring island groups. Their only book
-was nature, and this was read and studied with
-eagerness and intelligence. Their ancient history
-consisted of legendary lore handed down from
-generation to generation. But</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>There are books extant which they must needs allow
-of as proper evidence; even the mighty volumes of
-visible nature, and the everlasting tables of right reason.</p>
-<p>BENTLEY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>From century to century, from generation to
-generation, these people, without leaving a
-permanent record of what had happened and
-without being conscious of art or science, lived
-and died in a state of happiness and contentment.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>For he had no catechism but the creation, needed no
-study but recollection, and read no book but the volume
-of the world.</p>
-<p>SOUTH.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>That ignorance and vice should have existed
-among this primitive people, so completely
-isolated from the progressive part of the world, is
-not strange, as they lived in a land of plenty, fed
-and clothed, as it were, by the almost unaided
-resources of nature, conditions largely
-responsible for their inborn laziness. Ignorance and
-superstition go hand in hand. The Tahitians have
-always been extremely superstitious and both
-civilization and Christianization have been
-powerless in eradicating this national evil. We must,
-however, judge them not too severely in this
-matter, as superstition is by no means uncommon
-amongst us at the present day. Our best poets
-are not exempt from it.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I think it is the weakness of mine eyes</p>
-<p>That shapes this wondrous apparition:</p>
-<p>It comes upon me!</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-<p>Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth unseen,
-both when we wake and when we sleep.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-<p>A person terrified with the imagination of spectres is
-more reasonable than one who thinks the appearance
-of spirits fabulous and groundless.</p>
-<p>ADDISON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>With the progress and spread of education of
-the masses, superstition will gradually be starved
-out here as elsewhere. The greatest vice of the
-Tahitians is licentiousness, which remains as when
-Captain Cook visited the island. In speaking of
-the looseness of the marital relations, he says:</p>
-<blockquote>
-And so agreeable is this licentious plan of life to
-their disposition, that the most beautiful of both sexes
-thus commonly spend their youthful days, habituated
-to the practice of enormities which would disgrace the
-most savage tribes, but are peculiarly shocking amongst
-a people whose general character in other respects has
-evident traces of the prevalence of humane and tender
-feelings.</blockquote>
-<p>The Tahitians have reason to claim that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The vices collected through so many ages for a long
-time past flow in upon us.</p>
-<p>SENECA.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Intemperance among the natives has never had
-a firm foothold in the island and tobacco is used
-with moderation. Gambling, such a common vice
-among the peoples of the Orient, has never been
-cultivated and practiced to any extent in Tahiti.
-These ocean-bound people, living in happy and
-contented isolation, had no desire for national or
-personal wealth or fame, neither had they any
-inclination or desire for art or the sciences. They
-believed in the mottoes:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>If you are but content, you have enough to live upon
-with comfort.</p>
-<p>PLAUTUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Ambition breaks the ties of blood, and forgets the
-obligations of gratitude.</p>
-<p>SIR WALTER SCOTT.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>They lived a restful, unselfish life, happy in the
-companionship of their families, relatives and
-friends, with no morbid desires to distract them
-from the full enjoyment of what Nature showered
-upon them with bountiful never-failing liberality.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Their customs are by Nature wrought;
-But we, by art, unteach what Nature taught.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-insignia-of-tahitian-royalty">
-<h1>THE INSIGNIA OF TAHITIAN ROYALTY</h1>
-<p>Tahitian royalty was hereditary, and women
-were not excluded. There were chiefs and
-chiefesses governing tribes, and head chiefs and
-head chiefesses ruling over several tribes or the
-whole island. There were no crowns and no
-sceptres. The insignia of royalty was a belt
-ornamented with feathers. The red feathers
-were what the diamonds and other precious
-stones are in ancient and modern crowns. This
-belt was called Maro. Captain Cook gives the
-following description of a maro:</p>
-<blockquote>
-It is a girdle, about five yards long, and fifteen
-inches broad; and, from its name, seems to be put on
-in the same manner as is the common maro, or piece
-of cloth used by these people to wrap round the waist.
-It was ornamented with red and yellow feathers; but
-mostly with the latter, taken from a dove found upon
-the island. The one end was bordered with eight
-pieces, each about the size and shape of a horseshoe,
-having their edges fringed with black feathers. The
-other end was forked, and the points were of different
-lengths. The feathers were in square compartments,
-ranged in two rows, and otherwise so disposed to
-produce a pleasing effect. They had been first pasted
-or fixed upon some of their own cloth, and then sewed
-to the upper end of the pendant which Captain Wallis
-had displayed, and left flying ashore, the first time that
-he landed at Matavai.</blockquote>
-<p>This insignia of office was highly respected by
-the natives and was handed down from one
-generation of rulers to the other, carrying with it
-the sovereignty of the office. One of the civil
-wars in the island was caused by a failure on
-the part of one of the chief esses (Purea) to
-deliver the maro to her legitimate successor.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="diseases-of-tahiti">
-<h1>DISEASES OF TAHITI</h1>
-<p>Before the Europeans came to Tahiti, the
-beautiful little island was a sanatorium. The natives
-were temperate, frugal in their habits,
-subsisting almost exclusively on fish, fruit and
-vegetables, and lived practically an outdoor life even
-in their bamboo huts. They were
-unencumbered by useless clothing and spent, as they do
-now, much of their time in sea and fresh-water
-bathing. They were almost exempt from acute
-destructive diseases. They were free from the
-most fatal of acute contagious and infectious
-diseases, such as smallpox, measles, scarlatina,
-cholera, etc. Tuberculosis and venereal diseases
-were unknown before the white man invaded the
-island. The immediate effect of the European
-civilization on the health and lives of the natives
-was frightful. On this subject I will let
-Ariitaimai speak:</p>
-<blockquote>
-When England and France began to show us the
-advantages of their civilization, we were, as races then
-went, a great people. Hawaii, Tahiti, the Marquesas,
-Tonga, Samoa and New Zealand made a respectable
-figure on the earth's surface, and contained a population
-of no small size, better fitted than any other possible
-community for the condition in which they lived. Tahiti,
-being the first to come in close contact with the
-foreigners, was first to suffer. The people, who numbered,
-according to Cook, two hundred thousand in 1767,
-numbered less than twenty thousand in 1797, according
-to the missionaries, and only about five thousand in
-1803. This frightful mortality has been often doubted,
-because Europeans have naturally shrunk from
-admit ting the horrors of their own work, but no one doubts
-it who belongs to the native race. Tahiti did not
-stand alone in misery; what happened there happened
-everywhere, not only in the great groups of high islands,
-like Hawaii with three or four hundred thousand
-people, but in little coral atolls which could only support
-a few score.</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image27">
-<img alt="FISHERMEN'S HOME" src="images/Image27.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 386.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">FISHERMEN'S HOME</p>
-<div class="legend">
-<blockquote>
-<p>Moerenhout, who was the most familiar of all
-travelers with the islands in our part of the ocean, told the
-same story about all. He was in the Austral group
-in 1834. At Raivave he found ninety or one hundred
-native rapidly dying, where fully twelve hundred had
-been living only twelve or fourteen years before. At
-Tubuai he found less than two hundred people among
-the ruins of houses, temples and tombs. At Rurutu
-and Rimitava, where a thousand or twelve hundred
-people had occupied each, hardly two hundred were
-left, while nearly all the women had been swept away
-at Rurutu. Tlie story of the Easter Islanders is
-famous. That of the Marquesas is about as pathetic
-as that of Tahiti or Hawaii. Everywhere the
-Polynesian perished, and to him it mattered little whether he
-died of some new disease or from some new weapon,
-like the musket, or from misgovernment, caused by the
-foreign intervention.</p>
-<p>No doubt the new diseases were most fatal. Almost
-all of them took some form of fever, and comparatively
-harmless epidemics, like measles, became frightfully
-fatal when the native, to allay the fever, insisted on
-bathing in cold water. Dysentery and ordinary colds,
-which the people were too ignorant and too indolent
-to nurse, took the proportions of plagues. For forty
-generations these people had been isolated in this ocean,
-as though they were in a modern sanatorium, protected
-from contact with new forms of disease, and living on
-vegetables and fish. The virulent diseases which had
-been developed among the struggling masses of Asia
-and Europe found a rich field for destruction when
-they were brought to the South Seas. Just as such
-pests as lantana, the mimosa or sensitive plant, and the
-guava have overrun many of the islands, where the
-field for them was open, so diseases ran through the
-people. For this, perhaps, the foreigners were not
-wholly responsible, although their civilization certainly
-was; but for the political misery the foreigner was
-wholly to blame, and for the social and moral
-degradation he was the active cause. No doubt the ancient
-society of Tahiti had plenty of vices and was a sort
-of Paris in its refinements of wickedness, but these
-had not prevented the islanders from leading as happy
-lives as had ever been known among men.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p>These are strong words, but they are
-nevertheless only too true. Civilization brings to savage
-races curses as well as blessings. The primitive
-people are more receptive of new vices than
-new virtues.</p>
-<p>In 1880 the number of inhabitants had again
-increased to thirteen thousand five hundred, but
-since that time it has been reduced to eleven
-thousand, as shown by the last census. When
-Captain Cook visited the island he emphasized
-particularly the absence of acute diseases. In
-speaking of chronic diseases he remarks:</p>
-<blockquote>
-They only reckon five or six which might be called
-chronic, or national disorders, amongst which are the
-dropsy and the <em>fefai</em>, or indolent swellings before
-mentioned as frequent at Tongataboo.</blockquote>
-<p>The fearful, swift depopulation of the island
-was caused by the introduction of new acute
-infectious and contagious diseases, such as
-smallpox, measles, whooping-cough, la grippe, etc.,
-which among these people was attended by a
-frightful mortality. It was only three years ago
-that an epidemic of measles, a trifling disease
-with us, claimed several hundred lives,
-including many adults, and extended to nearly all of
-the islands of the entire group. The disease that
-is now threatening the extinction of the race
-in a short time is pulmonary tuberculosis. The
-natives are extremely susceptible to this disease,
-and the small native houses, crowded with large
-families, are the breeding stations for infection.</p>
-<p>The French government has at last recognized
-the need of taking active measures to improve
-the sanitary conditions of their colony and
-protect the natives against the spread of infectious
-diseases. A corps of three physicians, sent by the
-French government on this mission, made the
-voyage from San Francisco to the island on the
-steamer <em>Mariposa</em> with me. The names of these
-physicians are: Dr. Grosfillez, surgeon-major of
-the first class of the colonial troops; Dr. H.
-Rowan, a graduate of the Pasteur Institute, and
-Dr. F. Cassiau, of the clinic of Marseilles. The
-military surgeon receives an annual salary of
-fifteen hundred dollars, the two civil doctors
-twelve hundred dollars each. They are under
-contract for five years. They have been given
-judicial power to enforce all sanitary regulations
-they see fit to institute. They will be stationed at
-different points and will establish a requisite
-number of lazarettos, something which will fill
-a long-felt and pressing need.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image28">
-<img alt="NATIVE SETTLEMENT" src="images/Image28.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 338.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">NATIVE SETTLEMENT</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="present-prevailing-diseases">
-<h1>PRESENT PREVAILING DISEASES</h1>
-<p>The average temperature of the inhabited part
-of the island, which can not be less than 78 to
-80 degrees Fahrenheit, has a relaxing influence
-on the natives and much more so on the small
-contingent of whites. The Europeans and
-Americans find it necessary every three to five years
-to seek for a few months a cooler climate to
-restore their energies and vigor. The
-government officials and officers of the small garrison
-are not obliged to serve for more than the same
-time consecutively, when they are relieved from
-their posts and commands. It is this relaxation
-which, to a certain extent, at least, is responsible
-for the great mortality of comparatively mild,
-acute, infectious diseases, and the severity of
-pulmonary tuberculosis among the natives.
-Tuberculosis of the lymphatic glands, skin, bones
-and joints appears to be extremely rare. The
-moisture-laden atmosphere and the suddenness
-with which the cool land and ocean breezes set
-in after the heat of the day, are conducive to the
-development of rheumatic affections, which are
-prevalent in all parts of the island, more
-especially during the rainy season in midwinter. The
-same can be said of bronchial affections and
-pneumonia. The free and unrestrained intercourse
-among natives accounts for the rapid spread of
-tuberculosis and acute infectious diseases among
-the entire population and from island to island.</p>
-<p>The sanitary commission now engaged, in
-efforts to reduce the mortality of the natives will
-establish rules and regulations which will have
-for their object the prevention of dissemination
-of acute as well as chronic infectious diseases,
-and will undoubtedly accomplish much toward
-the preservation of the race; but these officers
-will meet with stubborn opposition on the part
-of the natives when attempts are made, in their
-interest, to curtail their personal liberties. The
-ties of relationship and friendship among the
-natives are very strong, and become most
-apparent in case of misfortunes and sickness.
-Smallpox breaks out almost every year, and claims its
-share of victims. Vaccination is supposed to be
-compulsory, but the natives are inclined to escape
-it. Vaccination is done gratuitously at the
-Military Hospital for all natives who can be induced
-to submit to it. Under present conditions it is
-almost impossible to reach the inhabitants of the
-small atoll islands.</p>
-<p>Like in all tropic countries, tetanus is of
-quite frequent occurrence. The small native
-pony is found everywhere, and as the rural natives
-are all barefooted and spend much of their time in
-the jungles in impregnating the flower of the
-vanilla-bean and gathering fruits, wounds prone
-to infection with the tetanus bacillus are of
-frequent occurrence.</p>
-<p>Malarial diseases are comparatively rare,
-although the plasmodium-carrying mosquitoes are
-numerous and aggressive, and children in the
-country districts are nude, and the men limit their
-clothing to the wearing of a loin-cloth. No case
-of typhoid fever has been known to have
-originated in the island. For this there exists a
-satisfactory explanation. The exemption in this
-island from this disease, so widely distributed
-over the entire part of the inhabited globe, is
-due entirely to an abundant supply of the purest
-drinking water supplied by the numerous
-mountain streams. Nearly all the inhabitants live on
-the coast, near the outlet of a brook or stream,
-where, consequently, there is no danger whatever
-of water-contamination. I found three cases of
-typhoid fever in the Military Hospital, members
-of one family, who had been brought there from
-one of the neighboring atoll islands.</p>
-<p>Varicose veins, varicocele and hydrocele are
-very common. The absence of anything like a
-large ulcer in many cases of large and numerous
-varicose veins of the leg, I attributed to the
-toughness of the skin of the bare legs. Venereal
-diseases are widespread throughout the entire
-island, and more especially in Papeete and the
-near-by larger villages. For over a hundred years
-the natives have suffered from this scourge
-brought there by the European sailors and
-adventurers. Syphilis has been transmitted from
-generation to generation until it has
-contaminated the major part of the population, for</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The gods visit the sins of the fathers upon the
-children.</p>
-<p>EURIPIDES.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The wickedness of a few brings calamity on all.</p>
-<p>PUBLIUS SYRUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The length of time the disease has existed
-among the natives has established a certain
-degree of tolerance or immunity, as it pursues a
-comparatively mild course, as I found very few
-instances of the ravages of the remote results
-of syphilis. I saw only one case of saddle nose,
-caused by tertiary syphilis.</p>
-<p>Leprosy is not as prevalent as in the Hawaiian
-Islands, but isolated cases are found in nearly
-all the islands belonging to this group, being more
-prevalent in some than in others. Segregation
-has never been attempted. The lepers mix freely
-with the members of their families and neighbors,
-and are not shunned by any one. I was informed
-that many of the lepers, much disfigured by the
-disease, seek an island where many of these
-unfortunates have founded a colony for the purpose
-of escaping from public gaze. There, away from
-relatives and friends, they spend their short span
-of life and await patiently the final relief which
-only death can bring.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>O Death, the Healer, scorn thou not, I pray.
-To come to me; of cureless ills thou art
-The one physician. Pain lays not its touch upon a
-corpse.</p>
-<p>ÆSCHYLUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Elephantiasis in its worst forms has taken a
-firm hold on the natives, especially the inhabitants
-of the near-by island of Moorea. There this
-disease can be studied in all its stages, from a slight
-enlargement of one of the extremities to
-colossal swellings, which, when the upper and lower
-extremities are affected at the same time, make it
-necessary for the patient to crawl on his hands
-and feet in dragging himself from place to place.
-Regarding elephantiasis as it exists in Tahiti and
-the other islands of the French colony, I will
-make use of a few extracts taken from a valuable
-paper on this subject by Dr. Lemoine, recently in
-charge of the Military Hospital, and published in
-one of the government reports. According to
-this author, who has seen much of this disease in
-Tahiti and surrounding islands, it may affect
-most regions of the body, and not infrequently
-makes its appearance as an acute affection with
-all the symptoms characteristic of lymphangitis,
-including quite a violent continued remittent
-form of fever, which lasts two or three months.
-The acute form is, almost without exception,
-complicated by synovitis of the joints of the
-affected limb, which he regards as almost
-pathognomonic of the disease, differentiating it from
-ordinary forms of lymphangitis. After the
-subsidence of the acute symptoms and in the chronic
-form the disease is essentially a chronic
-lymphangitits, accompanied by marked enlargement of
-the veins. According to his observations the
-regions most frequently involved are the lower
-extremities, external genitals, and lastly, the
-hands and forearms. Three years ago I was
-given an opportunity to see at the hospital and
-poorhouse at Antigua, West Indies, ninety cases
-of elephantiasis, and not in a single one of them
-did the disease affect the upper extremity, while
-in the French colony of the South Seas this is
-not infrequently the case. I do not know that
-a satisfactory explanation has ever been given
-why the disease should behave so differently in
-fixing its location in the two groups of islands.
-Lemoine, as well as other writers on
-elephantiasis, has seen the disease become stationary by
-the removal of the patient to a colder climate.
-Europeans become susceptible to elephantiatic
-infection after a prolonged residence in tropical
-countries where the disease prevails.</p>
-<p>Lemoine does not agree with Manson, who
-believes that elephantiasis is caused by the
-<em>Filaria sanguinis</em>, and is suspicious that the
-essential parasitic cause is a yet undiscovered microbe.
-He made blood examinations night and day of
-patients under his care, and was unable to
-constantly detect the filariæ in their embryonic state
-in the peripheral blood, and consequently claims
-that the presence of filaria in the organism is not
-an infallible diagnostic indication, and that their
-abundance is not proportionate to the intensity
-of the disease. The fact that the elephantiatics
-improve in colder climates he regards as another
-proof that filariasis is not the essential cause of
-the disease.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image29">
-<img alt="TAHITIAN CHILDREN" src="images/Image29.jpg" style="width: 392.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">GROUP OF TAHITIAN CHILDREN</p>
-</div>
-<p>In a number of cases extirpation of the
-infiltrated enlarged lymphatic glands was followed by
-decided improvement, and in the case of a
-Tahitian the improvement remained at the end of
-three years. He has also operated on a number
-of cases by partial excision of the mass, first on
-one side of the limb, then on the other, with
-decided benefit to the patient in most of them. In
-some cases deep incisions through the entire
-thickness of the indurated mass afforded relief
-and resulted in diminution of the size of the
-swelling. He relates the details of the case of a
-native, fifty years old, the subject of
-elephantiasis of the lower limbs, that he operated on in
-two stages several weeks apart, removing first a
-large section from the anterior and later from
-the posterior part of the swelling, and as shown
-by the accompanying illustrations in the report
-depicting the condition of the limbs before and
-after operation, with an excellent result.
-However, in some of the cases the benefit thus derived
-did not last for any considerable length of time.</p>
-<p>In making the excision, the superfluous skin is
-excised with the underlying indurated tissues,
-and the skin margins reflected for some distance
-in order to create sufficient room for a more
-liberal removal of the deep tissues. In one case,
-that of a woman thirty-eight years of age, the
-patient died two weeks after the second operation.
-Death was attributed to loss of blood and the
-debilitated condition of the patient when she
-entered the hospital. In another case, a Tahitian,
-thirty-five years old, affected with elephantiasis
-of all limbs and the external genitals, he operated
-successfully on one of the arms, the seat of an
-enormous swelling below the elbow. The excised
-mass weighed fifteen kilograms. Owing to the
-large size of the swelling, the operation proved
-one of great difficulty, and on account of the
-tension incident to the approximation of the margins
-of the flaps the sutures cut through and the
-wound ultimately healed by granulation. At the
-second operation nearly the entire mass was
-removed, with the result that the wound finally
-healed after a prolonged suppuration and the
-patient was relieved of the incumbrance caused
-by the great weight of the swelling. The relief
-afforded induced the patient to request additional
-operations for the removal of the swellings
-involving other regions of the body, but as the
-surgeon soon after left the island his desire could
-not be gratified.</p>
-<p>The climate of Tahiti is not congenial for
-pulmonary and rheumatic affections, as the
-atmosphere is too moist. It is admirably adapted for
-patients the subjects of nervous affections in all
-their protean forms. The quietude, balmy air
-and pleasing surroundings are the best
-therapeutic agents to secure mental rest and refreshing
-sleep. It is in the treatment of such affections
-that a trip to Tahiti can not be too strongly
-recommended.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-kahuna-or-native-doctor">
-<h1>THE KAHUNA OR NATIVE DOCTOR</h1>
-<p>For centuries the practice of the healing art
-was largely in the hands of priests. They
-ministered to the body as well as the soul. Their
-practice was purely empirical and the surgery,
-even of the most skilled, rude and often brutal.
-The human mind is very much inclined to look
-upon disease and the methods used to effect
-a cure as something mysterious. Even at this
-late day many people who are well educated
-and who in everything else seem to possess a
-liberal amount of good common sense, have very
-strange ideas in regard to disease and the means
-employed in treatment. Promises to cure and a
-liberal expenditure of printers' ink render them
-an easy prey to mysterious methods. All races
-and all tribes have always had among them men
-and women in whom they confided in case of
-accident or disease. Very often priesthood and
-medicine were combined in the same person.
-Among the ancient Tahitians the chief was at
-the same time priest and medical adviser. The
-American Indians had their medicine-men, the
-Tahitians and other South Sea Islanders their
-Kahuna. It is very interesting to know
-something of the early practice of medicine and
-surgery among the Tahitians. Captain Cook
-gives them great credit from what he saw of their
-surgery:</p>
-<blockquote>
-They perform cures in surgery, which our extensive
-knowledge in that branch has not, as yet, enabled us to
-imitate. In simple fractures, they bind them up with
-splints, but if part of the substance of the bone be
-lost, they insert a piece of wood, between the fractured
-ends, made hollow like the deficient part. In five or
-six days, the rapooa, or surgeon, inspects the wound,
-and finds the wood partly covered with the growing
-flesh. In as many more days, it is generally entirely
-covered; after which, when the patient has acquired
-some strength, he bathes in the water, and recovers.</blockquote>
-<p>In speaking of medicine he says:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Their physical knowledge seems more confined; and
-that, probably, because their diseases are fewer than
-their accidents. The priests, however, administer the
-juices of herbs in some cases; and women who are
-troubled with after-pains, or other disorders after
-child-bearing, use a remedy which one would think
-needless in a hot country. They first heat stones, as
-when they bake their food; then they lay a thick cloth
-over them, upon which is put a quantity of a small
-plant of the mustard kind; and these are covered with
-another cloth. Upon this they seat themselves, and
-sweat plentifully, to obtain a cure. They have no
-emetic medicine.</blockquote>
-<p>In referring to the few indigenous diseases
-he adds:</p>
-<blockquote>
-But this was before the arrival of the Europeans;
-for we have added to this short category a disease
-which abundantly supplies the place of all the others;
-and is now almost universal [syphilis]. For this they
-seem to have no effectual remedy. The priests, indeed,
-sometimes give them a medley of simples; but they own
-that it never cures them, and yet, they allow that, in
-a few cases, nature, without the assistance of a
-physician, exterminates the poison of this fatal disease, and
-perfect recovery is produced. They say that a man
-affected with it will often communicate it to others in
-the same house, by feeding out of the same utensils,
-or handling them, and that, in this case, they frequently
-die, while he recovers; though we see no reason why
-this should happen.</blockquote>
-<p>On his fourth voyage to the Society Islands
-Captain Cook learned to what fearful extent
-syphilis had spread throughout all of the islands
-of the group and became aware what ravages it
-had caused among the natives. On visiting new
-islands he did all in his power to protect the
-natives against this scourge by excluding all
-women visitors from the ship and by strictly
-enjoining persons known to be infected from
-landing. On the probable effects of these new
-regulations he comments:</p>
-<blockquote>
-Whether these regulations, dictated by humanity,
-had the desired effect, or no, time only can discover.
-I had been equally attentive to the same object when
-I first visited the Friendly Islands; yet I afterward
-found, with real concern, that I had not succeeded, and
-I am afraid that this will always be the case, in such
-voyages as ours, whenever it is necessary to have a
-number of people on shore.</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image30">
-<img alt="FAR-ADVANCED LEPROSY" src="images/Image30.jpg" style="width: 431.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">A CASE OF FAR-ADVANCED LEPROSY AFFECTING ALL LIMBS</p>
-</div>
-<p>Massage as a remedial agent in the treatment
-of disease originated in the Orient, and the
-Tahitians were familiar with it and frequently made
-use of it. On this subject Captain Cook can
-speak from personal experience. During his stay
-in Tahiti in 1777 he suffered evidently from a
-severe attack of sciatica, the pain extending from
-the hip to the toes. King Otoo's mother, his
-three sisters and eight more women came on his
-ship one evening for the purpose of giving him
-treatment and remained all night to fulfill their
-well-meant mission. Here is the account of the
-treatment to which he was subjected by the
-women:</p>
-<blockquote>
-I accepted the kindly offer, had a bed spread for them
-upon the cabin floor, and submitted myself to their
-directions. I was desired to lay myself down amongst
-them. Then, as many of them as could get around me,
-began to squeeze me with both hands, from head to foot,
-but more particularly on the parts where the pain was
-lodged, till they made my bones crack, and my flesh
-became a perfect mummy. In short, after undergoing
-this discipline about a quarter of an hour, I was glad to
-get away from them. However, the operation gave me
-immediate relief, which encouraged me to submit to
-another rubbing down before I went to bed; and it
-was so efficient that I found myself pretty easy all the
-night after. My female physicians repeated their
-prescription the next morning, before they went ashore,
-and again in the evening, when they returned on board;
-after which, I found the pains entirely removed, and
-the cure being perfected, they took leave of me the
-following morning. This they call <em>romee</em>, an operation
-which, in my opinion, far exceeds the flesh-brush, or
-anything of the kind that we make use of externally.
-It is universally practised amongst the islanders, being
-sometimes performed by men, but more generally by
-women.</blockquote>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="physicians-in-tahiti">
-<h1>PHYSICIANS IN TAHITI</h1>
-<p>Tahiti is not an Eldorado for doctors. The
-entire island has only eleven thousand inhabitants
-and the great majority of them are too poor to
-pay for medical services. The only place in
-Tahiti where a doctor can be found is in Papeete.
-At the time I visited the island there was only one
-physician in private practice in the capital city,
-Dr. Chassaniol, a retired naval surgeon, the only
-private practitioner in the whole group of islands.
-The bulk of medical practice is in the hands of
-the government physician, always a military man
-who has at the same time charge of the Military
-Hospital and takes care of the sick poor, and
-supervises all matters pertaining to sanitation.
-The only other physicians in the island are the
-naval surgeons on board a small man-of-war
-almost constantly anchored in the harbor of
-Papeete. The government physician is privileged
-to practice outside of the hospital, and from this
-source he receives the bulk of his income. As
-the resident physician and the government
-physician are the only qualified physicians in the
-whole archipelago, it requires no stretch of the
-imagination to realize that until the present time
-the French government has not made adequate
-provisions for their subjects who require the
-services of a physician.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image31">
-<img alt="A LEPER OF TAHITI" src="images/Image31.jpg" style="width: 334.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">A LEPER OF TAHITI</p>
-</div>
-<p>The Tahitians have not lost their faith in their
-Kahunas or native doctors, who without any
-medical knowledge, practice their art. These
-men, with a local reputation as healers of disease,
-are to be found in nearly every village. They are
-well thought of and are influential members of
-society in their respective communities. Like the
-medicine-men of our Indians, they make use of
-roots, bark and herbs as remedial agents, and the
-natives, like many of our own people, have more
-faith in this mysterious kind of medication than
-in modern, concentrated, palatable drugs
-prescribed by the most eminent physician. To the
-credit of these native medicine-men, it must be
-said that they give to all afflicted who apply for
-treatment not only their services, but also the
-medicines without any expectation of a financial
-reward or even the gratitude of their clients.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="hopital-militaire">
-<h1>HÔPITAL MILITAIRE</h1>
-<p>The military hospital at Papeete is the only one
-in the French colonial possession of the Society
-Islands, numbering one hundred and sixty-eight
-islands and containing thirty thousand
-inhabitants, of whom eleven thousand live in Tahiti.
-As some of these islands are more than one
-hundred miles apart, it is somewhat strange that
-the French government has not taken earlier
-action in establishing small cottage hospitals in
-a number of the larger islands, as in case of
-severe injuries or sudden illness the natives of
-the distant islands are not within reach of timely
-medical aid and the transportation of a sick or
-injured person to Papeete from the far-off islands
-or villages by small schooners or canoes is
-necessarily slow and in many instances dangerous.
-The Sanitary Commission now stationed in the
-islands will, it is to be hoped, act promptly in
-remedying this serious defect in the care of the
-sick natives.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image32">
-<img alt="MILITARY HOSPITAL" src="images/Image32.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 492.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">MILITARY HOSPITAL IN PAPEETE</p>
-</div>
-<p>The Military Hospital at Papeete is an old
-structure of brick and cement, situated near the
-western limits of the city in a large square yard
-inclosed by a high stone wall, surmounted by a
-crest of fragments of glass, which imparts to the
-inclosure a prison-like appearance, the austerity
-of which, however, is much relieved by
-beautiful tropical trees, shrubbery and flowers in front
-of the entrance and in the courtyard. The
-hospital proper comprises seven buildings, only one
-of which is two stories high. The hospital has
-accommodations for forty beds. The officers'
-rooms contain two beds each; the remaining space
-is divided into small wards for privates and
-civilians. In one ward, the windows of which
-are strongly barred, are kept the military
-prisoners, and another small ward is devoted to
-obstetrical cases. The rooms and wards are well
-ventilated and clean, the beds comfortable; the
-hospital furniture otherwise is scanty and antique.
-The drug-room is large, richly supplied with
-capacious jars, mortars of all sizes, herbs, roots
-and a complete outfit for making infusions,
-decoctions and tinctures, which reminds one very
-vividly of an apothecary shop of half a century
-ago. This department is in charge of a
-pharmacist who, besides mixing drugs, does some
-chemical and bacteriological work in a small and
-imperfectly equipped laboratory. The
-operating-room is an open passageway between two
-adjoining wards, and all it contained suggestive of its
-use were an operating table of prodigious size
-and decidedly primitive construction, and,
-suspended from the wall, a tin irrigator, to which was
-attached a long piece of rubber tubing of
-doubtful age. The hospital is well supplied with water,
-and contains a bathroom, a shower-bath and
-modern closets. The hospital is in charge of the
-government physician, who is always a medical
-officer of the colonial troops, detailed for this
-special service, usually for a period of three
-years. From the official reports I gleaned that
-on an average this institution takes care of about
-three hundred and fifty patients a year. At the
-time of my visit the number of patients did not
-exceed fifteen, among them one in the prison
-ward. All of the patients were the subjects of
-trifling affections, with the exception of three
-cases of typhoid fever sent to the hospital from
-one of the atoll islands. The patients are being
-cared for by three Catholic sisters and orderlies
-as they are needed. The poor are admitted
-gratuitously; private patients pay from six to fifteen
-francs a day. The hospital is beautifully located
-on the principal street of the city and faces the
-charming little harbor. A small private hospital
-for the foreign residents and tourists is needed
-here and under proper management would prove
-a remunerative investment.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-island-of-plenty">
-<h1>THE ISLAND OF PLENTY</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>O Christ! it is a goodly sight to see</p>
-<p>What heaven hath done for this delicious land.</p>
-<p>BYRON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The wealth of Tahiti is on its surface. Its
-mountains are not pregnant with precious metals
-nor has nature stored up in their interior material
-for fuel and illumination, as none of these are
-needful to make the people content and happy.
-The Tahitian has no desire to accumulate wealth;
-the warm rays of the sun reduce the use of
-fuel to a minimum, and the millions of glittering
-stars and the soft silvery light of the moon in
-the clear blue sky create a bewitching light at
-night, which, more than half of the time, would
-make artificial illumination a mockery. Then,
-too, Tahiti is the land of gentle sleep and
-pleasant dreams, where people do not turn night into
-day, but rise with the sun and retire soon after
-he disappears in the west behind the vast expanse
-of the ocean. God created Tahiti for an ideal
-island home and not as a place for get-rich-quick
-methods, speculation and bitter competition for
-business, for</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Where wealth and freedom reign, contentment fails,</p>
-<p>And <em>honor lacks</em> where commerce long prevails.</p>
-<p>GOLDSMITH.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Tahiti's fabulous wealth consists in its
-inexhaustible soil and the perennial warm, stimulating
-breath of the tropic sun. It is the island of
-never-fading verdure and vigorous and
-never-ceasing vegetation. The fertile soil, the abundant
-rainfall throughout the year, the warm sunshine
-and the equable climate are most conducive to
-plant-life and here these conditions are so
-harmonious that there can be no failure of crops in
-the Lord's plantation. There never has been a
-famine in Tahiti, and there never will be,
-provided the government protects the magnificent
-mountain forests—nature's system of irrigation.
-Tahiti's food-supply is select and never-failing,
-and is furnished man with the least possible
-exertion on his part. The bounteous provisions
-nature has made here for the abode of man are
-a marvel to the visitor and after he has once
-seen them and has become familiar with them he
-can not escape the conclusion that he is in</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>A land flowing with milk and honey.</p>
-<p>JEREMIAH xxxii:22.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The food products and fruits grown in the
-forests without the toil of man are admirably
-adapted for the climatic conditions, being
-laxative and cooling, and undoubtedly account for the
-excellent health of the natives before the invasion
-of the island by the Europeans. The island was
-destined for the natives, and the natives were
-suited to the island.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Man's rich with little, were his judgment true;</p>
-<p>Nature is frugal, and her wants are few;</p>
-<p>These few wants answer'd, bring sincere delights;</p>
-<p>But fools create themselves new appetites.</p>
-<p>YOUNG.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Content with what the sea and forest provided
-for them, these children of Nature lived a happy
-life, free from care, free from morbid desires
-for wealth or fame.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>O blissful poverty!</p>
-<p>Nature, too partial, to thy lot assigns</p>
-<p>Health, freedom, innocence, and downy peace, —</p>
-<p>Her real goods, — and only mocks the great</p>
-<p>With empty pageantries.</p>
-<p>FENTON.</p>
-<p>No sullen discontent nor anxious care.</p>
-<p>E'en though brought thither, could inhabit there.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The Tahitian people, before they tasted the
-questionable advantages of European civilization,
-had much in common and lived happily in the
-full enjoyment of Nature's varied and bountiful
-gifts. Tribal life was family life, and public
-affairs were managed to suit the wants of the
-people, and if any one in power failed in his
-duties, the people took the law in their own hands
-and corrected the evil, usually without bloodshed.
-If the people were not prosperous according to
-our ideas of life, they were at least happy, and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>We must distinguish between felicity and prosperity;
-for prosperity leads often to ambition, and ambition to
-disappointment.</p>
-<p>LANDOR.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="tahiti-s-natural-bread-supply">
-<h1>TAHITI'S NATURAL BREAD SUPPLY</h1>
-<p>The Tahitians have no corn or grain of any
-kind out of which to make bread. They
-found in the forests excellent substitutes for
-bread, and more healthful for that climate, in
-the form of breadfruit, wild plantain and tubers
-rich in starch. This is the kind of bread they have
-been eating for centuries, and which they prefer
-to our bread to-day. When the island was
-densely populated and the demand on nature's
-resources exceeded the supply, the natives had to
-plant trees, roots and tubers in vacant spaces in
-the forest, high up on the mountainsides, where
-they grew luxuriantly without any or little care,
-and by these trifling efforts on the part of man
-the food-supply kept pace with the increase of
-the population. Trees and plants distributed in
-this manner found a permanent home in the new
-places provided for them, and have since
-multiplied, and thus increased greatly the annual yield.
-Evidences of dissemination of bread and
-fruit-yielding trees and plants by the intervention of
-man are apparent to-day throughout the island
-by the presence of cocoa-palms, breadfruit and
-other fruit trees, and plantains, in localities where
-nature could not plant them, in places formerly
-inhabited but abandoned long ago when the
-population became so rapidly decimated by the
-virulent diseases introduced into the island by the
-Europeans. To-day the fruit and fruit-supply is
-so abundant that it is within easy reach of every
-family and can be had without money and
-without labor. We will consider here a few of the
-most important substitutes for bread on which
-the Tahitians largely subsist:</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image33">
-<img alt="FRUIT VENDER" src="images/Image33.jpg" style="width: 339.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITIAN FRUIT VENDER</p>
-</div>
-<p><em>Breadfruit</em>.—Breadfruit is the most important
-article of food of the Tahitians. It is the fruit
-of the breadfruit tree <em>Arfocarpus incisiva</em>
-(Linné), a tree of the natural order,
-<em>Artocarpaceæ</em>, a native of the islands of the Pacific
-Ocean and of the Indian Archipelago. This
-fruit is one of the most important gifts of nature
-to the inhabitants of the tropics, serving as the
-principal part of their food, the inner tough bark
-of the tree furnishing a good material for native
-cloth, while the trunk of the tree is used as a
-material for canoes. The exudation issuing from
-cuts made into the stem, a resinous substance, is
-in use for closing the seams of canoes. Several
-varieties of breadfruit trees are to be found in
-Tahiti, differing in the structure of their leaves
-and in the size and time of ripening of the fruit,
-so that ripe breadfruit is obtainable more or less
-abundantly throughout the year. The foliage of
-this tree is the greenest of all green, and it is
-this deep green which distinguished this tree at
-once from its neighbors. The male flowers are
-in catkins, with a two-leaved perianth and one
-stamen; the female flowers are nude. The leaves
-are large, pinnatifid, frequently twelve to eighteen
-inches long, smooth and glossy on their upper
-surface. The much branched tree attains a height
-of twenty to fifty feet. The fruit is a <em>sorosis</em>,
-a compound or aggregate the size of a child's
-head, round or slightly oblong, light green, fleshy
-and tuberculated on the surface. The rind is
-thick, and marked with small square or
-lozenge-shaped divisions, each having a small elevation
-in the middle. The fruit hangs by a short, thick
-stalk from the small branches, singly or in
-clusters of two or three together. It contains a white,
-somewhat fibrous pulp, which when ripe becomes
-juicy and yellow, but has then a rotten taste.
-The fruit is gathered for use before it is ripe, and
-the pulp is then white and mealy, of the
-consistence of fresh bread. The fruit is prepared in
-many ways for food, roasted on hot coals, boiled
-or baked, or converted by the experienced native
-cook into complicated dainty dishes. The
-common practice in Tahiti is to cut each fruit into
-three or four pieces and take out the core; then to
-place heated stones in the bottom of a hole dug
-in the ground; to cover them with green leaves,
-and upon this place a layer of the fruit, then
-stones, leaves and fruit alternately, till the hole
-is nearly filled, when leaves and earth to the
-depth of several inches are spread over all. In
-half an hour the breadfruit is ready; the outsides
-are, in general, nicely browned, and the inner
-part presents a white or yellowish cellular
-substance. Breadfruit prepared in this manner and
-by other methods of cooking is very palatable, as
-I can speak from my own experience, slightly
-astringent and highly nutritious, a most excellent
-dietetic article for the tropics. The tree is very
-prolific, producing two and sometimes three crops
-a year. When once this tree has gained a firm
-foothold in a soil it cherishes, and in a climate it
-enjoys, it exhibits a tenacity to reproduce itself
-to an extent often beyond desirable limits. Of
-this Captain Cook writes:</p>
-<blockquote>
-I have inquired very carefully into their manner
-of cultivating the breadfruit tree; but was always
-answered that they never plant it. The breadfruit tree
-plants itself, as it springs from the roots of the old
-ones, so that the natives are often under the necessity
-of preventing its progress to make room for trees of
-other sorts to afford some variety in their food.</blockquote>
-<p>The timber is soft and light, of a rich yellow
-color, and assumes when exposed to the air the
-appearance of mahogany.</p>
-<p><em>Manioc</em>.—Manioc is another important article
-of food in Tahiti and likewise serves as an
-excellent substitute for baker's bread. It is the large,
-fleshy root of <em>Manihot utilissima</em>, a large,
-half-shrubby plant of the natural order <em>Euphorhiaceæ</em>,
-a native of tropical America, and much cultivated
-in Tahiti as an article of food. In this island the
-plant has run wild in some of the ravines formerly
-inhabited. The plant grows in a bushy form,
-with stems usually six to eight feet high, but
-sometimes much higher. The stems are brittle,
-white, and have a very large pith; the branches
-are crooked. The leaves are near the ends of the
-branches, large, deeply seven-parted, smooth and
-deep green. The roots are very large,
-turnip-like, sometimes weighing thirty pounds, from
-three to eight growing in a cluster, usually from
-twelve to twenty-four inches in length. They
-contain an acrid, milky juice in common with other
-parts of the plant, so poisonous as to cause death
-in a few minutes; but as the toxic effect is owing
-to the presence of hydrocyanic acid, which is
-quickly removed by heat, the juice, inspissated
-by boiling, forms the excellent sauce called
-<em>casareep</em>; and fermented with molasses it yields
-an intoxicating beverage called <em>onycou</em>; whilst
-the root, grated, dried on hot metal plates and
-roughly powdered, becomes an article of food.
-It is made into thin plates which are formed into
-cakes, not by mixing with water, but by the action
-of heat, softening and agglutinating the particles
-of starch. The powdered root prepared in this
-manner is an easily digestible and nutritious
-article of farinaceous food. The root is largely
-made use of in the manufacture of starch and is
-exported from Tahiti for this purpose to a
-considerable extent. The starch made from this
-root is also known as Brazilian arrowroot, and
-from it tapioca is made. Manioc is propagated
-by cuttings of the stem, and is of rapid growth,
-attaining maturity in six months.</p>
-<p><em>Sweet Cassava</em>.—Sweet cassava is the root of
-<em>Manihot Aipi</em>, a woody plant indigenous to
-tropical South America, growing in great abundance
-in the dense forest of the mountain valleys of
-Tahiti. The plant grows to a height of several
-feet and has large long leaves growing from the
-foot of the stem. The root is reddish and
-nontoxic; it can therefore be used as a culinary
-esculent, without any further preparation than
-boiling, while its starch can also be converted
-into tapioca. The <em>Aipi</em> has tough, woody fibres,
-extending along the axis of the tubers, while
-generally the roots of the manioc (bitter cassava)
-are free from this central woody substance.</p>
-<p><em>Arrowroot</em> or <em>Arru Root</em>.—The commercial
-arrowroot is prepared from different
-starch-yielding roots, but the bulb of the <em>Maranta
-marantaceæ</em> produces more starch and of a better
-quality than any of the others. It is a native of
-the West Indies and South America, and is
-cultivated quite extensively in Tahiti. Many little
-patches of this plant may be seen along the road
-from Papeete to Papara, where the lowland soil
-is well adapted for its cultivation. The
-starch-producing plant which is cultivated most
-extensively in Tahiti and other South Sea Islands is
-the <em>Tacca pinnatifolia</em>. This perennial plant will
-even thrive well in the sandy soil near the shore.
-The stalk, with terminal spreading pinnatifid
-leaves, is from two to three feet high and the root
-is a tuber about the size of a small potato. The
-tacca starch is much valued in medicine, and is
-particularly used in the treatment of inflammatory
-affections of the gastro-intestinal canal.</p>
-<p><em>Taro or Tara</em>.—Taro is another very
-important food-product of Tahiti, as well as other
-islands of the Pacific, notably the Hawaiian
-Islands. It is the root of <em>Colocasia macrorhiza</em>,
-a plant of the natural order <em>Araceæ</em>, of the same
-genus with <em>cocoa</em>. The plant thrives best in low,
-marshy places. In all of the South Sea Islands
-it is very extensively cultivated for its roots, which
-constitute in these islands a staple article of food,
-excellent substitutes for potatoes and bread. The
-roots are very large, from twelve to sixteen
-inches in length, and as much in circumference.
-They are washed in cold water to take away their
-acridity, which is such as to cause excoriation of
-the mouth and palate. The roots are cooked in
-the same way as the breadfruit, the rind being
-first scraped off. Another very common way of
-eating taro is in the form of <em>poi</em>. This method
-of preparing the root was known to the Tahitians
-when Captain Cook visited the island. He
-compared <em>poi</em> with &quot;sour pudding.&quot; It requires some
-skill to make <em>poi</em>. The root, finely grated, is
-allowed to ferment over night. It tastes sour and
-is a refreshing, delicate and nutritious dish, when
-served ice-cold. The plant has no stalk; the
-petioled heart-shaped leaves spring from the root.
-The flower is in the form of a spathe. The boiled
-leaves can be used as a substitute for spinach.</p>
-<p><em>Wild Plantain</em>.—The wild plantain furnishes
-its liberal share of food-supply for the
-Tahitians. It is a tree-like, perennial herb (<em>Musa
-paradisiaca</em>) with immense leaves and large
-clusters of the fruits. In its appearance it
-resembles very closely the banana, but differs from
-it as the hands and fingers of the bunches of fruit
-are turned in the opposite direction. The fruit is
-long and somewhat cylindrical, slightly curved,
-and, when ripe, soft, fleshy and covered with a
-thick but tender yellowish skin. This plant is
-indigenous to Tahiti and is found in abundance in
-the forests. The fruit is cooked or baked and
-is keenly relished by the natives.</p>
-<p>All of the articles of food I have referred to
-above are easily digested, palatable and nutritious,
-and for the Tahiti climate more healthful than
-bread and potatoes, on which the masses of
-people living in colder climates subsist to a large
-extent. I attribute the comparative immunity of
-the South Sea Islanders from attacks of
-appendicitis principally to their diet, which is laxative,
-easily digested and not liable to cause
-fermentation in the gastro-intestinal canal.
-Appendicitis does occur in these islands, but this disease
-is extremely rare as compared with the frequency
-with which it is met in Europe, and more
-especially in the United States. The Americans
-are the most injudicious and reckless eaters in
-the world, which goes far in explaining the
-prevalence of gastric and intestinal disorders
-among our people.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image34">
-<img alt="PREPARING BREADFRUIT" src="images/Image34.jpg" style="width: 348.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">PREPARING BREADFRUIT</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-cocoanut-the-meat-of-the-tahitians">
-<h1>THE COCOANUT, THE MEAT OF THE TAHITIANS</h1>
-<p>It is fortunate that the inhabitants of the
-tropics have no special liking for a meat diet,
-as the free indulgence in meat could not fail in
-resulting detrimentally to the health of the
-inhabitants. The continuously high temperature
-begets indolence, and indolence tends to diminish
-secretion and excretion, conditions incompatible
-with a habitual consumption of meat. Nature
-has established fixed rules concerning the manner
-of living in the tropics. She deprives man of the
-appetite for meat and other equally heavy articles
-of food, and supplies him with nourishment
-adapted for the climate. It is under such climatic
-conditions that we are made to realize that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The more we deny ourselves, the more the gods
-supply our wants.</p>
-<p>HORATIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>We can not use the mind aright when the body is
-filled with excess of food.</p>
-<p>CICERO.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>For the preservation of health in the tropics,
-it is necessary that the food should be laxative,
-cooling, easy of digestion and nutritious. Fish
-and fruit of various kinds meet these
-requirements. From observations and experience, the
-ignorant natives have made a wise selection of
-what is best for them to eat, and know what to
-avoid. High living brings its dire results in
-temperate and cold climates, but any one
-indulging in it in the tropics will curtail his life, as it
-can not fail to be productive, in a short time, of
-organic changes of a degenerative type in
-important internal organs, which soon begin to
-menace life and never fail in diminishing the vital
-resistance against acute diseases. Luxury in the
-tropics in the way of eating and drinking is a
-dangerous experiment, and it is well to remember,
-especially when living in a hot climate, that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>By degrees man passes to the enjoyments of a vicious
-life, porticoes, baths and elegant banquets; this by the
-ignorant was called a civilized mode of living, though
-in reality it was only a form of luxury.</p>
-<p>TACTICUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>No such mistakes are made by the natives of
-Tahiti as long as they remain true to their
-ancient manner of living. With few exceptions,
-indeed, they lack the means of imitating the
-foreigners in living a life of luxury. Any native
-who departs too far from the simple, natural life
-of his ancestors will pay dearly for the doubtful
-pleasures of a life of luxury. The average native,
-fortunately, has no such inclinations; he is
-satisfied to live the simple, natural life his forefathers
-led, and he follows the scriptural advice.</p>
-<blockquote>
-And having food and raiment, let us be therewith
-content. I. Timothy vi:8.</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image35">
-<img alt="SAPODILLA" src="images/Image35.jpg" style="width: 391.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">SAPODILLA</p>
-</div>
-<p>Nature has provided for the South Sea
-Islanders something better than beef and mutton
-in the form of meat—fish and cocoanut. Fish
-are very abundant all around the coast of Tahiti,
-and the lagoons, where the fishing is mostly done,
-are as quiet as inland lakes. More than two
-hundred varieties of fish have been found in
-these waters. But the real and best meat for the
-Tahitians is the cocoanut. The meat of this
-wonderful nut contains a large per cent, of oil,
-which supplies the system with all the fatty
-material it requires, and for the tropic climate
-this bland, nutritious vegetable oil is far superior
-to any animal fats. We will give here the
-Cocoa-palm the liberal space it so well deserves:</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-cocoa-palm">
-<h1>THE COCOA-PALM</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Through groves of palm</p>
-<p>Sigh gales of balm,</p>
-<p>Fire-flies on the air are wheeling;</p>
-<p>While through the gloom</p>
-<p>Comes soft perfume,</p>
-<p>The distant beds of flowers revealing.</p>
-<p>SIR WALTER SCOTT.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The cocoa-palm is the queen of the forests of
-the South Sea Islands. The tall, slender,
-branchless, silvery stem and fronded crown of this
-graceful tree distinguish it at once from all its
-neighbors and indicate the nobility of its race.
-The great clusters of golden fruit of giant size,
-partially obscured by the drooping leaves and
-clinging to the end of the stem, supply the natives
-with the necessities of life. The cocoa-palm is
-the greatest benefactor of the inhabitants of the
-tropics.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>It is meat, drink and cloth to us.</p>
-<p>RABELAIS.</p>
-<p>Fruits of palm-tree, pleasantest to thirst</p>
-<p>And hunger both.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>This noble tree grows and fructifies where hard
-manual labor is incompatible with the climate, in
-islands and countries where the natives have to
-rely largely on the bounteous resources of nature
-for food and protection. The burning shores of
-India and the islands of the South Pacific are
-the natural homes of the cocoa-palm. It has a
-special predilection for the sandy beach of Tahiti
-and the innumerable atoll islands near to and far
-from this gem of the South Seas. The giant nuts
-often drop directly into the sea and are carried
-away by waves and currents from their native
-soil to strange islands, where they are cast upon
-the sandy shore, to sprout and prosper for the
-benefit of other native or visiting tribes. By this
-manner of dissemination, all of these islands have
-become encircled by a lofty colonnade of this
-queen of the tropics.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Beautiful isles! beneath the sunset skies</p>
-<p>Tall silver shafted palm-trees rise between</p>
-<p>Tall orange trees that shade</p>
-<p>The living colonnade:</p>
-<p>Alas! how sad, how sickening is the scene</p>
-<p>That were ye at my side would be a paradise.</p>
-<p>MARIA BROOKS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The cocoa-palm (<em>Cocos nucifera</em>), is a native
-of the Indian coasts and the South Sea Islands.
-It belongs to a genus of palms having pinnate
-leaves or fronds, and male and female flowers on
-the same tree, the latter at the base of each spadix.
-It is seldom found at any considerable distance
-from the seacoast, except where it has been
-introduced by man, and generally thrives best
-near the very edge of the sea. In Tahiti isolated
-cocoa-palms are found on the lofty hilltops,
-projecting, with their proud crowns of pale green
-leaves, far above the level of the sea of the dense
-forest and impenetrable jungles. This
-transplantation from shore to the sides and summits of
-the foot-hills had its beginning before the
-discovery of the island, when the overpopulation made
-it necessary to provide for a more abundant
-food-supply. There it has prospered and multiplied
-since without the further aid of man, yielding its
-rich harvests of fruit with unfailing regularity.
-The frightful reduction in the number of
-inhabitants since the white man set his foot on the
-island has made this additional food-supply
-superfluous, as the palms within easier reach in
-the lowlands along the shore more than meet the
-present demands.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image36">
-<img alt="COPRA ESTABLISHMENT" src="images/Image36.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 387.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">COPRA ESTABLISHMENT</p>
-</div>
-<p>The cocoa-palm is a proud but virtuous tree.
-Its dense cluster of delicate roots does not
-encroach upon the territory of other trees, but claims
-only a very modest circular patch of soil from
-which to abstract the nourishment for the
-unselfish, philanthropic tree. The base of the stem
-is wide and usually inclined, but a few feet
-from the ground becomes straight and cylindrical,
-with nearly the same diameter from base to
-crown. The curve of the stem is caused by the
-effects of the prevailing winds on the yielding,
-slender stem of the youthful tree, but with
-increasing growth and strength, it rises column-like
-into the air, balancing its fruit-laden massive
-crown in uncompromising opposition to the
-invisible aerial force. It is only in localities
-exposed to the full power of strong and
-persistent trade-winds that the full-grown trees lean
-in the same direction in obedience to the
-unrelenting common deforming cause. The
-full-grown tree is, on an average, two feet in diameter,
-and from sixty to one hundred feet high, with
-many rings marking the places of former leaves,
-and having, at its summit, a crown of from
-sixteen to twenty leaves, which generally droop, and
-are from twelve to twenty feet in length. These
-giant leaves furnish an excellent material for
-thatched roofs, and in case of need, a few leaves,
-properly placed, will make a comfortable,
-waterproof tent. The fruit grows in short racemes,
-which bear, in favorable situations, from five to
-fifteen nuts; and ten or twelve of these racemes,
-in different stages of fructification, may be seen
-at once on a tree, about eighty or one hundred
-nuts being its ordinary annual product. For the
-purpose of answering the requirements of
-primitive man, the Creator has ordained that this tree
-shall yield a continuous harvest from one end of
-the year to the other. Flowers and fruit in all
-stages of ripening grace the crown at all times
-of the year. The young cocoanut contains the
-delicious, cooling milk, and the soft pulp, a
-nourishing article of food. The mature nut is
-an excellent substitute for meat, as the kernel
-contains more than seventy per cent, of a fixed,
-bland, nutritious oil. The tree bears fruit in from
-seven to eight years from the time of planting,
-and its lifetime is from seventy to eighty years.
-Its greatest ambition during youth is to reach the
-clouds and equal its oldest neighbors in height.
-Young trees, with a stem less than four inches in
-diameter, rival their veteran neighbors in height,
-devoting their future growth to the increase in
-the dimension and strength of the stem, and their
-vital vigor to the bearing of its perennial,
-unfailing yield of fruit for the benefit of man and
-beast. The stem, when young, contains a central
-part which is sweet and edible, but when old,
-this is a mass of hard fibre. The terminal bud
-(palm cabbage) is esteemed a delicacy when
-boiled or stewed or raw in the form of a
-vegetable salad. The sweet sap (toddy) of the
-cocoa-palm, as of some other palms, is an
-esteemed beverage in tropic countries, either in its
-natural state, or after fermentation, which takes
-place in a few hours; and, from the fermented
-sap (palm wine), a strong alcoholic liquor
-(<em>arrack</em>), is obtained by distillation. The root of
-the cocoa-palm possesses narcotic properties.
-Every part of this wonderful tree is utilized by
-the untutored inhabitants of the tropics. The
-dried leaves are much used for the thatch, and
-for many other purposes, as the making of mats,
-screens, baskets, etc., by plaiting the leaflets.
-The strong midribs of the leaves supply the
-natives with oars. The wood of the lower part
-of the trunk is very hard, and takes a beautiful
-polish. The fibrous centre of old stems is made
-into salad. By far the most important fibrous
-part of the cocoa-palm is the coir, the fibre of the
-husk of the imperfectly ripened nut. The
-sun-dried husk of the ripe nut is used for fuel, and
-also, when cut across, for polishing furniture,
-scrubbing floors, etc. The shell of the nut is
-made into cups, goblets, ladles, etc., and these
-household articles are often finely polished and
-elaborately ornamented by carving. This, the
-most generous of all trees, from the time of its
-birth until it yields to the ravages of time, serves
-man in hundreds of different ways, furnishing
-him with food and drink, clothing,
-building-material, fuel, medicine, most exquisite delicacies,
-wine, spirits and many articles of comfort and
-even of luxury. What other tree but the
-cocoa-palm could have been in the mind of Milton when
-he wrote:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>In heav'n the trees</p>
-<p>Of life ambrosial fruitage bear, and vines</p>
-<p>Yield nectar.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image37">
-<img alt="GOVERNMENT WHARF" src="images/Image37.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 338.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">GOVERNMENT WHARF–PAPEETE (Waiting for the steamer <em>Mariposa</em>)</p>
-</div>
-<p>The cocoa-palm is a peaceful, modest, virtuous
-tree. It prefers its own kin, but is charitable to
-its neighbors, irrespective of race. It towers
-far above the sea of less favored trees, which find
-in its shade protection against the burning rays
-of the tropic sun and the fury of the trade-winds.
-Proudly it stands guard at the shores of the
-coral-girt islands of the South Pacific, waving its
-lofty, fruit-laden crown, responding alike to the
-cool, refreshing land breezes and the humid
-trade-winds in the balmy air of the tropics.
-Peaceful and lovely is a forest of palms, where</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Leaves live only to enjoy love, and throughout the
-forest every tree is luxuriating in affectionate embrace;
-palm, as it nods to palm, joins in mutual love; the
-poplar sighs for the poplar; plane whispers to plane,
-and alder to alder.</p>
-<p>CLAUDIANUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The sight of a forest of cocoa-palms from a
-distance is imposing, a walk through it full of
-enchantment. Nowhere does this noble tree
-appear to better advantage than in Tahiti. This,
-the most favored of all islands, is engirdled by an
-almost unbroken belt of palm-forest, stretching
-from the very verge of the ocean to the base of
-the foot-hills, with the towering, tree-clad
-mountains for a background; a forest planted by the
-invisible hand of Nature, a forest cared for by
-Nature, a forest which produces nearly all of the
-necessities of life for the natives from day to
-day, and year to year, with unfailing regularity.
-Enter this forest and the eye feasts on a scene
-which neither the pen of the most skilled
-naturalist nor the brush of the ablest landscape artist
-can reproduce with anything that would do
-justice to nature's inexhaustible resources and
-artistic designs. Such a scene must be gazed
-upon to be appreciated. Between the colonnade of
-symmetrical silvery stems and crowns of feathery
-fronds, inlaid with the ponderous golden fruit,
-the eye catches glimpses of the blue, placid ocean,
-the foam-crested breakers, of the still more
-beautifully blue dome of the sky, the deep green
-carpet of the unbroken tropic forest thrown over
-the mountainsides, or the naked, rugged, brown
-peaks basking in the sunlight, and on all sides
-flowers of various hues and most delicate tints.
-Surely,</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Who can paint</p>
-<p>Like Nature? Can imagination boast.</p>
-<p>Amid its gay creation, hues like hers,</p>
-<p>Or can it mix them with that matchless skill.</p>
-<p>And lose them in each other, as appears</p>
-<p>In every bud that blows?</p>
-<p>THOMSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Add to the pleasures flashed upon the mind by
-the ravished eye, the perfumed, soothing air of
-the tropics, the sweet sounds of the aeolian harp
-as the gentle breeze strikes its well-timed chords
-in the fronded crowns of the palms overhead, the
-bubbling of the ripples of the near-by ocean as
-they kiss the sandy rim of the island shore, and
-the clashes of the breakers as they strike with
-unerring regularity the coral reef, the outer wall of
-the calm lagoon, and your soul will be in a mood
-to join the poet in singing the praises of nature:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>O Nature!</p>
-<p>Enrich me with knowledge of thy works:</p>
-<p>Snatch me to heaven!</p>
-<p>THOMSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Queen of the tropic isles, guardian of their
-sun-kissed strands, friend of their dusky, simple
-children of Nature! Continue in the future as
-you have done in the past, to dispense your work
-of generosity and unselfish charity, to sustain and
-protect the life of man and beast in a climate you
-love and revere, a climate adverse for man to
-earn his daily bread by the sweat of his brow!
-I have seen your charms in your favorite
-island-abode and studied with interest your innumerable
-deeds of generosity, your full storehouse for the
-urgent needs of man and your safe refuge for
-the inhabitants of the air. Had Whittier visited
-the island Paradise, your native home, he would
-have written in the positive in the first stanza,
-when he framed that beautiful verse:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I know not where His islands lift</p>
-<p>Their fronded palms in air;</p>
-<p>I only know I can not drift</p>
-<p>Beyond His love and care!</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>There is no other country and no other island
-in the world that has such a variety of
-indigenous fruit trees as Tahiti. Add to these trees
-that have furnished the natives with an
-abundance of fruit for centuries, the fruit trees that
-have been introduced since the island was
-discovered, and many of which flourish now in a
-wild state in the forests, and it will give some
-idea concerning the wealth of fruit to be found in
-the forests of Tahiti. Most of the inland
-habitations away from the coast have been abandoned
-long ago, and in all these places, in the valleys
-and high up on the mountainsides, many kinds
-of exogenous fruit trees, planted by former
-generations, have gained a permanent foothold. Here
-they multiply, blossom, ripen their fruit, and all
-the islanders have to do is to gather the annual
-crop. Here delicious little thin-skinned oranges
-grow, and the finest lemons and limes can be had
-for the gathering. The poor find here</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Fruits of all kinds in coat</p>
-<p>Rough or smooth rind, or bearded husk or shell,</p>
-<p>She gathers tribute large, and on the board</p>
-<p>Heaps with unsparing hand.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image38">
-<img alt="CORNER IN PAPEETE" src="images/Image38.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 408.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">CORNER IN PAPEETE</p>
-</div>
-<p>Nothing reminds one more of Tahiti being the
-forbidden Garden of Eden, than the abundance of
-fruit that grows in the forests without the
-intervention of man. Some kind of fruit can be found
-during all seasons of the year, and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Small store will serve, where store</p>
-<p>All seasons, ripe for use, hangs on the stalk.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It is here not as in most countries where</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The poor inhabitant beholds in vain</p>
-<p>The redd'ning orange and the swelling grain.</p>
-<p>ADDISON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>as the poorest of the poor have access to Nature's
-orchard and can fill their palm-leaf baskets with
-the choicest fruits. The Tahitian</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>He feeds on fruits, which of their own accord</p>
-<p>The willing ground and laden tree afford.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>This mingling, in the most friendly manner, of
-the old forest trees with familiar fruit trees
-introduced from distant lands and laden with
-golden fruit, is a most beautiful sight. The fruit
-trees stand their ground even against the most
-aggressive shrubs, and it is often no easy matter
-to reach the ripe hiding fruit in the dense
-network of branches thrown around and between the
-branches of the imprisoned tree. What a
-blessing these acid fruits are to the natives, sweltering
-under the rays of the tropic sun! How easy it
-is for them to make a cooling, refreshing drink!
-Take a young cocoanut, open it at one end, and
-add to its milk the juice of a lime or a lemon, and
-the healthiest and most refreshing drink is made.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Bear me, Pomona! to thy citron groves,</p>
-<p>To where the lemon and the piercing lime,</p>
-<p>With the deep orange glowing through the green,</p>
-<p>Their lighter glories lend.</p>
-<p>THOMSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>It is claimed that the large apple family is the
-descendant of the Siberian crab-apple, modified
-by climate, soil and grafting. This statement
-appears to me incorrect, as I have seen a tree in
-the Hawaiian forests which bears a real sweet
-apple which in shape and taste has a strong
-resemblance to the apples of our orchards. The
-tree is from twenty to thirty feet in height,
-slender and few branched. The same tree is
-found in the forests of Tahiti, and its fruit is
-much sought after by the natives. It would be
-difficult to connect the wild apple tree of the
-South Sea Islands with the Siberian crab-apple,
-to which it bears no resemblance, either in the
-appearance of the tree or its fruit. Let us now
-consider a few of the fruit trees which adorn and
-enrich the forests of Tahiti:</p>
-<p><em>Alligator Pear</em>, or <em>Avocado</em>.—This is the most
-delicate and luscious of all the fruit-products of
-the Tahitian forests, where it is found in its wild
-state in great abundance. It is the fruit of the
-<em>Persea gratissima</em>, a tree belonging to the natural
-order <em>Lauraceæ</em>, an evergreen tree of the tropic
-regions of America and the South Sea Islands.
-It attains a height of from thirty to seventy feet,
-with a slender stem and dome-like, leafy top.
-The branches, like the stem, are slender, and
-ascend on quite an acute angle from their base.
-The leaves resemble those of the laurel. The
-flowers are small, and are produced toward the
-extremities of the branches. The fruit is a drupe,
-but in size and shape resembles a large pear.
-The rind is green, thin, and somewhat rough on
-the outside. In the center of the pulp is a large,
-heart-shaped kernel, wrapped in a thin,
-paper-like membrane. The pulp is green or yellowish,
-not very sweet, but of a delicious taste and
-exiquisite flavor, and contains about eight per cent,
-of a greenish fixed oil. The way to eat this
-delicious fruit is to cut it in two lengthwise,
-remove the kernel, season with sweet oil,
-vinegar, salt and pepper, and eat with a teaspoon.
-In the form of a salad it is one of the daintiest
-of all dishes. The softness of the pulp and the
-richness in oil have led the French to call this
-fruit &quot;Vegetable butter.&quot; The seeds of the
-alligator pear have come into medical use at the
-instance of Dr. Froehlig, and particularly through
-the efforts of Park, Davis &amp; Co.,
-a manufacturing firm. The alligator pear is a very perishable
-fruit, which accounts for its scarcity and
-fabulous price in our markets.</p>
-<p><em>Pawpaw or Papaya</em> is the fruit of the <em>Carica
-Papaya</em>, natural order <em>Papayaceæ</em>. It is an
-exceedingly graceful, branchless little tree, which
-grows to the height of from ten to twenty feet
-and is of short vitality. Its natural home is
-in South America and the islands of the Pacific.
-The cylindrical stem is grayish white, roughened
-in circles where the previous whorls of leaves
-had their attachment. The leaves are from
-twenty to thirty inches long and are arranged
-in the form of a whorl at the very top of the stem,
-where also the fruit grows, close to the stem.
-The fruit when ripe is light yellow, very similar
-to a small melon, and with a somewhat similar
-flavor. The skin is very thin and the pulp
-exceedingly soft, hence a very perishable fruit.
-The seeds are numerous, round and black, and
-when chewed have, in a high degree, the
-pungency of cresses. It requires time to acquire a
-taste for this healthy, very digestible tropical
-fruit, but when once developed, it is keenly
-relished. It is eaten either raw or boiled. It
-possesses digestive properties of considerable
-value, which have been utilized in the preparation
-of a vegetable pepsin. The acrid, milky sap of
-the tree or the juice of the fruit much diluted
-with water, renders any tough meat washed with
-it, tender for cooking purposes, by separating
-the muscular fibres (Dr. Holder). It is said
-even the exhalations from the tree have this
-property; and meats, fowls, etc., are hung among
-its leaves to prepare them for cooking. The tree
-is of very rapid growth, bears fruit all the year
-and is very prolific.</p>
-<p><em>Mango</em> is the fruit of <em>Mangifera Indica</em>. It
-is a stately, broad-branching, very shady tree,
-from thirty to forty feet in height, belonging to
-the natural order <em>Anacardiaceæ</em>. The stem is
-short, from eight to ten feet, when it divides
-into long, graceful branches, with an
-impenetrable foliage, a fine protection against the
-rain and the scorching rays of the sun. The
-bark is almost black and somewhat rough. The
-leaves are in clusters, lanceolate, entire, alternate,
-petioled, smooth, shining, tough, and about
-seven inches long, with an agreeable resinous
-smell. The flowers are small, reddish white or
-yellowish, in large, erect, terminal panicles. The
-fruit is kidney-shaped, smooth, greenish yellow,
-with or without ruddy cheeks, varying greatly
-in size and quality, and containing a large,
-flattened stone, which is covered on the outside
-with fibrous filaments, largest and most abundant
-in the inferior varieties, some of which consist
-chiefly of fibre and juice, while the finer ones
-have a comparatively solid pulp. The size varies
-from that of a large plum to that of a man's
-fist. The largest and finest mangoes are found
-in Tahiti. The fruit is luscious and agreeably
-sweet, with an aromatic flavor and slightly acid
-taste. The kernels are nutritious, and have been
-cooked for food in times of scarcity. A mango
-tree laden with its golden fruit is a pleasing
-sight, and reminds one vividly of a Christmas
-tree.</p>
-<p><em>Lime</em>.—The fruit of <em>Citrus Planchoni, Citrus
-Australis Planchon</em>. The lime tree of Tahiti was
-undoubtedly introduced from Eastern Australia,
-where it is found as a noble tree, fully forty feet
-high, or, according to C. Hartmann, even sixty
-feet high. In Tahiti the tree is small, and in the
-dense jungles hardly exceeds the size of a shrub.
-The stem, as well as its numerous slender,
-wide-spreading, prickly branches, is very crooked. The
-fruit is similar to the lemon, but much smaller
-in size, being only about one and one-half inches
-in diameter, and almost globular in shape, with a
-smooth, green, thin rind and an extremely acid,
-pungent juice. For a thirst-quenching drink,
-the lime-juice is far preferable to the lemon.</p>
-<p><em>Pomegranate</em>.—The fruit of <em>Punica Granatum</em>,
-a shrub belonging to the natural order
-<em>Granataceæ</em>. This historic and useful shrub grows
-luxuriantly and with little or no care, in the fertile,
-sun-kissed soil of Tahiti. More than one-half
-of the interior of the oval purple fruit consists
-of large black seeds. The seedless variety has
-evidently never been introduced. The juice is
-subacid and very palatable. The flowers are
-ornamental, and sometimes are double. The rind
-of the fruit and the bark of the roots possess
-valuable medicinal properties. Consider for a
-moment what nature has done for the support,
-comfort and pleasure of the inhabitants of Tahiti,
-and we are ready to admit the truth of what the
-prince of poets said:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Here is everything advantageous to life.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>And we can answer with a positive yes the
-question proposed by another famous poet, in the
-beautiful stanza:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Know'st thou the land where the lemon trees bloom,</p>
-<p>Where the gold orange glows in the deep thicket's gloom,</p>
-<p>Where a wind ever soft from the blue heaven blows,</p>
-<p>And the groves are of laurel and myrtle and rose?</p>
-<p>GOETHE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image39">
-<img alt="A VIEW OF FAUTAHUA VALLEY" src="images/Image39.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 384.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">A VIEW OF FAUTAHUA VALLEY</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-forests-of-tahiti">
-<h1>THE FORESTS OF TAHITI</h1>
-<p>The primeval forests are the pride of Tahiti.
-Indirectly they are the wealth of the little island.
-They have been spared the ravages of the
-woodman's ax. The forests have been kind to the
-natives and the natives to the forests. The
-avaricious lumberman, the greatest enemy of public
-wealth and general prosperity, has fortunately
-so far not had a design on the magnificent
-forests of Tahiti, and may he never be permitted to
-carry on his work of destruction in this island
-paradise! The giant trees, growing the finest and most
-valuable timber, hold out much inducement to
-get-rich-quick men, but they have been destined
-for a better purpose; they, with the more
-menial companions, the humble, lowly shrubs,
-attract the clouds, determine rain, retain
-moisture and fill the river-beds, creeks and rivulets
-with the purest water. The forests extend from
-the shore to near the highest mountain-peaks,
-making up one great green sea of foliage,
-interrupted here and there by the summits of hills,
-ridges, and bare spots of brown, volcanic earth,
-where vegetation of any kind has been forbidden
-to take a foothold. Along and near the coast
-are the charming groves of cocoa-palms, where
-the ordinary trees, out of deference to the queen
-of the tropic forests, are few and modest in their
-ambition to compete with her in height. Here
-the guava shrub, groaning under the weight of
-its golden fruit, adds to the beauty of the grove.
-A walk through such a grove, with glimpses of
-the blue ocean and the verdant tree-clad hills
-and mountains, will bring the conviction that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The groves were God's first temples.</p>
-<p>BRYANT.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Raising the eyes and looking up the steep
-incline of the mountains clothed in perennial
-verdure by a dense virgin forest, we are almost
-instinctively reminded of the beautiful lines of
-Dryden:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>There stood a forest on the mountain's brow, which</p>
-<p>overlook'd the shady plains below;</p>
-<p>No sounding axe presumed these trees to bite, coeval</p>
-<p>with the world; a venerable sight.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The forest in the tropics has no rest. From
-one end of the year to the other, it appears the
-same. There is no general disrobing at the
-bidding of an uncompromising, stern winter.
-There are no arctic chills to suffer and no burden
-of snow to brave. Most of the trees are
-evergreen, and the few that imitate the example of
-their kind in the North by an annual change of
-their leaves, perform this task almost
-imperceptibly. There are no bald crowns and bare
-arms. Spring, summer and autumn mingle
-throughout the year; blossoming and ripe fruits
-go hand in hand in the same tree or neighboring
-trees. A walk through a tropic forest is no easy
-thing, owing to the dense interlacing and often
-prickly undergrowth, but the visitor is amply
-rewarded for his efforts. Every step brings new
-revelations, new surprises. Nowhere are there
-any signs of deforestation, either by fire or the
-cruel, thoughtless hand of man. You are in a
-forest</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Where the rude ax, with heaved stroke,</p>
-<p>Was never heard the nymphs to daunt,</p>
-<p>Or frown them from their hallow'd haunts.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The biggest trees are in the shaded, rich
-ravines and far up on the mountainside or
-hill-tops. They seem to be conscious of their
-superiority and power in the selection of their abode.
-Look at one of these monsters, with wide-spread,
-giant branches and impenetrable foliage, and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>View well this tree, the queen of all the grove;</p>
-<p>How vast her bole, how wide her arms are spread.</p>
-<p>How high above the rest she shoots her head!</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image40">
-<img alt="AVENUE OF FAUTAHUA" src="images/Image40.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 383.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">AVENUE OF FAUTAHUA</p>
-</div>
-<p>But in these forests, so full of life and
-perpetual activity, indications of death are seen here
-and there. The numerous climbing vines which,
-serpent-like, creep up and embrace in their
-deathly grasp some young, vigorous tree, have
-no good intentions for their patient, helpless host.
-The struggle may last for years, but the ultimate
-result is sure. The cruelty of the unwelcome
-intruder increases with his age and, strength. The
-fight for life becomes more and more intense.
-The plant-serpent throttles its victim more and
-more, penetrates its body with its additional
-roots, and sucks the very life-blood from its
-vitals. What promised to become the giant of
-the forest sickens and succumbs to a slow,
-lingering, ignominious death. The victory is
-complete and he now stands with</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Pithless arms, like a wither'd vine,</p>
-<p>That droops his sapless branches to the ground.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The ruthless climber has accomplished its
-purpose and it has become so strong and has
-made such intricate interlacements with
-adjoining trees that it holds the corpse erect in its cold
-embrace for an indefinite period of time, until
-some strong wind lays low forever the victor
-with the vanquished.</p>
-<p>Like everywhere else where the soil is fertile
-and other conditions for plant-growth favorable,
-so in the Tahitian forest, rank plant-life prospers.
-The lantana (Lantana Crocca) a shrubby plant
-two to four feet high, with beautiful little yellow
-and purple flowers arranged in umbels, has
-overrun the whole island. It is here, as in some of the
-other islands of the Pacific, the most aggressive
-and most troublesome of all weeds, and it is
-this plant which interferes with a more
-abundant growth of grass and consequently with a
-more productive pasturage in wild and cultivated
-grounds.</p>
-<p>The sense of isolation and solitude is nowhere
-more profound than in a tropical forest, and
-more especially so in Tahiti, as here animal life
-is scarce. The only game found are domestic
-hogs and chickens, which have run wild, and
-these are scarce. There are no birds of plumage
-and few song-birds. Chameleons frequent sunny
-spots, and butterflies, of all sizes and colors,
-enliven the air. There are no snakes and few
-poisonous insects; no deer, bear, leopards or
-monkeys. Even the ordinary water-birds, with
-the exception of a small species of sea-gull and
-occasionally a crane, seem to avoid this island.</p>
-<p>A day spent in the wonderful forests of Tahiti
-will bring no regrets; on the other hand, will be
-replete with pleasure and profit, and will leave
-charming pictures on memory's tablet which
-time can never efface. On the brightest day,
-darkness reigns underneath the almost
-impenetrable roof of branches, vines and foliage. Here
-and there the sun's rays penetrate through the
-gigantic bowery maze, and fall upon the ground
-with almost unnatural intensity, frequently
-appearing and disappearing as the wind plays
-with the leaves.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The green leaves quiver with the cooling wind,</p>
-<p>And make a checker'd shadow on the ground.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The solemn silence of the forest, the grandeur
-of vegetation, the effects of light and shadows,
-are impressive, and the visitor will carry away
-from Tahiti an inspiring and lasting mental
-picture of</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Her forests huge,</p>
-<p>Incult, robust, and tall, by Nature's hand</p>
-<p>Planted of old.</p>
-<p>THOMSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="noted-forest-trees-of-tahiti">
-<h1>NOTED FOREST TREES OF TAHITI</h1>
-<p>The forests of Tahiti comprise many species
-of trees, the timber of which would command a
-high price in the market, but it is my intention
-here to enumerate and briefly describe only a
-few of the trees which interest the visitor the
-most, as he will see them wherever he goes as
-shade trees, and as component parts of the
-magnificent forests.</p>
-<p><em>Purau or Burao</em> is the <em>Hibiscus tiliaceus</em>
-(Linné), (syn.: <em>Paritium tiliaceum</em>), order
-<em>Malvaceæ</em>. The flowers are bell-shaped, of a
-beautiful canary color, but quickly fall and turn to
-red or reddish brown. They are made up of
-five imbricated petals, painted a dark brown at
-their base and inner surface. The glaucous
-leaf-like calix is five-parted. The five stamens form
-a sheath for the pistil, which is five-parted and
-brown at its apex. The large leaves are used by
-the native housewives in lieu of a table-cloth.
-It is said that the macerated leaves and flowers
-are used to heal burns, bruises, etc. (McDaniels).
-The trunks of the largest trees are made into
-canoes. The inner tough bark serves as a
-substitute for hemp in the making of twine and
-ropes. The roots of this tree have earned a
-reputation as a valuable medicine in the
-treatment of diseases of the gastro-intestinal canal.
-This is a common and beautiful shade tree in
-Papeete, and if the traveler visits the island in
-January or February he will find it in full bloom.
-The dark green leaves and the light yellow
-flowers form a very pleasing contrast. It attains
-a height of from forty to sixty and more feet.
-The short and often very crooked stem sends off
-numerous large branches, clothed, like the stem,
-in a rough black bark. The branches are often
-so crooked and tortuous that they form such an
-intricate entanglement that even the woodman's
-ax would meet with difficulties to isolate and
-liberate them. The branches appear to have an
-intrinsic tendency to reach the ground, and when
-they do so strike root and become daughter trees,
-growing skyward, and soon rival in height the
-parent tree. In the woods it is not uncommon to
-find the parent tree surrounded at variable
-distances by numerous daughter trees. Many such
-ambitious branches are formed into graceful
-arches before they attain the wished-for
-independence. This tree, with its numerous offspring
-and interlacing branches, contributes much in
-rendering the jungles in which it grows
-impenetrable in many places. The wood is white and
-soft. The leaves are as large as an ordinary small
-soup-plate, long-petioled, seven-ribbed, broadly
-cordate and acuminate, dark green and glossy
-on their upper, and strongly veined and paler,
-on their lower surface.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image41">
-<img alt="CASCADE OF FAUTAHUA" src="images/Image41.jpg" style="width: 386.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">CASCADE OF FAUTAHUA</p>
-</div>
-<p><em>Banyan Tree</em>.—The <em>Ficus Indica</em>, a native tree
-of India, remarkable for its vast rooting branches,
-outstripping in this respect by far the tree just
-described. It is a species of wild fig, has ovate,
-heart-shaped, entire leaves, about five or six
-inches long, and produces a fruit of a rich scarlet
-color, not larger than a cherry, growing in pairs
-front the axils of the leaves. The branches send
-shoots downwards, which, when they have rooted,
-become stems; the tree in this manner spreading
-over a great surface, and enduring for many
-years. The banyan tree found in the island of
-Tahiti docs not spread as much as the Indian tree,
-and the aerial roots which later become a part of
-the trunk after they strike the ground and
-develop an independent existence, become
-supplied with new roots. Most of the aerial roots
-of the Tahitian tree take their origin from the
-lower part of the trunk and remain in close
-contact with it after they strike the ground, and
-many of them remain dangling free in the air
-in vain attempts to secure an independent
-existence, the branch roots being comparatively few.
-The tree is found at short intervals along the
-ninety-mile drive, and the largest one I saw was
-in the front yard of the Cercle Bougainville, the
-French club in Papeete.</p>
-<p><em>Pandanus Tree, Screw Pine</em>.—The <em>Pandanus
-Freycinctia</em> natural order of <em>Pandaneæ</em>. There
-are about fifty species of this tree, natives of
-South Africa to Polynesia. The pandanus tree
-of Tahiti is a palm-like tree which is found along
-the shore close to the water's edge, with a short
-white stem, much branched with long, simple
-imbricated leaves, usually spiny on the back and
-margin, their base embracing the stem, their
-spiral arrangement being well marked. The base
-of the stem does not touch the ground, but rests
-on a cluster of strong roots, which diverge
-somewhat before they strike the soil. The leaves
-are much used for thatch roofs and the thin,
-compact, superficial layer serves as wrappers for the
-native cigarettes. The fruit is edible and is eaten
-by the natives in times of scarcity of food.</p>
-<p><em>Flame Tree, Flamboyer</em>.—The <em>Brachychiton
-acerifolium</em> is the Australian flame-tree
-introduced, as is asserted, into Tahiti by Bougainville.
-It is a magnificent and common shade tree in
-Papeete, but is also found scattered all along the
-coast of the island. It is an evergreen tree with
-showy trusses of crimson flowers. This is the
-most beautiful of all ornamental trees in the
-island. The mucilaginous sap, when exuded,
-indurates to a kind of bassarin—tragacanth.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="vanilla-cultivation-in-tahiti">
-<h1>VANILLA CULTIVATION IN TAHITI</h1>
-<p>The cultivation of the aromatic vanilla-bean is
-one of the principal industries of Tahiti. The
-bean grows luxuriantly in the shady forests in the
-lowlands along the coast, and requires but little
-care. The climate and soil of Tahiti are
-specially adapted to the cultivation of the
-vanilla-bean, as the very best quality is grown here. The
-<em>Vanilla aromatica</em> is a genus of parasitic
-<em>Orchidaceæ</em>, a native of tropic parts of America and
-Asia, which springs at first from the ground
-and climbs with twining stems to the height of
-from twenty to thirty feet on trees, sending into
-them fibrous roots, produced from nodes, from
-which the leaves grow. These roots, drawing the
-sap from the trees, sustain the plant, even after
-the ground-root has been destroyed. Flower
-white; corolla tubular; stigma distant from
-anthers, rendering spontaneous fructification
-difficult; leaves oblong, light green, fleshy, with an
-exceedingly acrid juice; flowers in spikes, very
-large, fleshy and generally fragrant. The fruit
-is a pod-like, fleshy capsule, opening along the
-side. The ripe bean is cylindrical, about nine
-inches in length, and less than half an inch
-thick. It is gathered before it is entirely ripe,
-and dried in the shade. It contains within its
-tough pericarp a soft black pulp, in which many
-minute seeds are imbedded. The plant is
-cultivated by cuttings. In Mexico and South
-American countries, the insects effect
-impregnation; in Tahiti, this is done artificially. With
-a small, sharp stick the pollen is conveyed to
-the stigma of the pistil. Artificial impregnation
-of fifteen hundred flowers is considered a good
-day's work. Allusion has been made elsewhere to
-the fact that the shrewd Chinamen have
-depreciated the vanilla industry in Tahiti and ruined
-the reputation of the product. If the natives
-could be induced to stop their dealings with the
-scheming Chinese merchants and traders, and the
-government would release them from export
-duty, the cultivation of vanilla would soon
-regain its former importance and would yield a
-very profitable income. The Tahitians are not
-agriculturists; they are averse to hard manual
-labor; they are</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Of proud-lived loiterers, that never sow,</p>
-<p>Nor put a plant in earth, nor use a plough.</p>
-<p>CHAPMAN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>and hence are anxious to obtain what little money
-they need with as little effort as possible. Vanilla,
-once planted, requires very little attention, and
-it grows most luxuriantly in the dark shadow of
-the dense forest, where the natives engaged in
-artificial impregnation of the flower and in
-gathering the bean are protected against the direct
-heat of the sun. The great advantage of
-vanilla-cultivation to the island consists in the fact that
-this valuable article of commerce can be grown
-without deforestation, so essential in the
-cultivation of much less valuable products of the soil
-of the tropics.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image42">
-<img alt="BRIDGE ACROSS FAUTAHUA" src="images/Image42.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 342.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">BRIDGE ACROSS FAUTAHUA NEAR THE WATERFALL</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-rural-districts">
-<h1>THE RURAL DISTRICTS</h1>
-<p>Papeete is not the place to study the natives,
-their habits and customs, as European influence
-and example have here largely effaced the
-simplicity and charms of native life. The rural
-districts are the places for the tourist to get
-glimpses of real native life. He will find there
-the best specimens of natives, and an opportunity
-to study their primitive methods of living. There
-is no other island of similar size where the
-traveler will find it so easy to visit all of the
-rural districts and villages. By following the
-ninety-mile drive, he can encircle the entire
-island in a comfortable carriage, and finish the
-trip in four days, if his time is limited, and in
-doing so he sees the inhabited part of the island
-and nearly all of the villages. He will see on
-this trip Paea Grotto and cave, also
-picnic-grounds, eighteen miles from Papeete, Papara,
-six miles further, is noted for native singing,
-chanting and dancing. The real Tahitian life is
-met at Pari and Tautira. On the other side of
-the island, the road skirts along the coast and
-ascends five hundred feet above the level of the
-sea. The drive is a charming one, as the traveler
-never loses the sight of mountains and hills, and
-only very seldom, and at long intervals, of the
-blue Pacific Ocean. In some places the road-bed
-is cut through solid rock, and for a few moments
-the panoramic view of the magnificent scenery
-is shut out from sight, but on the other side of
-the cut a picture more beautiful than ever is
-unrolled. The ocean claims the first attention
-as it smiles in the dazzling sunshine beneath
-where</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The murmuring surge,</p>
-<p>That on th' unnumber'd idle pebbles chafes.</p>
-<p>Can not be heard so high.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In the distance we can see the foam-crested
-waves dash over the coral reef in their attempts
-to reach the placid waters of the peaceful lagoon,
-where the wavelets play with the pebbles on the
-shore. Looking toward the left, we again are
-face to face with the mountains, that are our
-constant companions, on the entire route. There
-is a feeling of solemnity which takes possession
-of the soul when communing with Nature in
-her grandest mood, and we begin to feel that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I live not myself, but I become</p>
-<p>Portion of that around me; and to me</p>
-<p>High mountains are a feeling; but the hum</p>
-<p>Of human cities, torture.</p>
-<p>BYRON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>We see the naked mountain-peaks and the bare
-backs of the foot-hills.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Rock-ribbed, and ancient as the sun.</p>
-<p>BRYANT.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>We pass through magnificent groves of
-cocoa-palms, and now the road leads through a primeval
-forest with an impenetrable jungle on its floor,
-where</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The winds within the quiv'ring branches play'd,</p>
-<p>And dancing trees a mournful music made.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>We pass through or near the quaint native
-villages peopled with naked children, scantily
-dressed women, and men whose only garment
-consists of a much-checkered, many-colored calico
-loin-cloth. We cross rivers, brooks and rivulets
-without number, and looking for their source
-we see glimpses, here and there, of cascades and
-cataracts, high up on the mountainside, in the
-form of streaks of silver in the clefts of the
-deep green ocean of trees. We see butterflies
-by the hundreds, of all colors, playing in the
-sunshine or eagerly devouring the nectar of the
-sweetest flowers. We admire the richness and
-variety of the floral kingdom, and inhale the
-perfume of the fragrant flowers, suspended in
-the pure air and wafted to us by the cool land
-breeze sent down from the top of the mountains.
-As the sun approaches the horizon, and the short,
-bewitching twilight sets in, with the gorgeous
-display of colors in the sky and the wonderful
-effects of light and shadow on sea and shore,
-we can realize that</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Softly the evening came. The sun from the western horizon</p>
-<p>Like a magician extended his golden wand o'er the landscape;</p>
-<p>Twinkling vapors arose; and sky, and water, and forest.</p>
-<p>Seemed all on fire at the touch, and melted and mingled together.</p>
-<p>LONGFELLOW.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The vistas and views along this circular drive
-are infinite; the surprises at every turn without
-number. No matter how much the visitor may
-have traveled, even if he has seen the whole
-world outside of this blessed island, he will see
-here many things he has never seen before.
-Every step brings new revelations of the beauty
-and goodness of Nature and her tender care for
-man. What a paradise for lovers of nature,
-for poets and artists! Here is a place above all
-others in the world, where</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>No tears</p>
-<p>Dim the sweet look that Nature wears.</p>
-<p>LONGFELLOW.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The further the visitor wends his way from
-Papeete, the more he will find the natives in their
-natural state, and the less contaminated by
-European influence. On the opposite side of the
-island, at Pari, the people have preserved their
-native customs, and live now about in the same
-manner as when Wallis discovered the island.
-Religion and civilization have liberated them
-from ancient barbarities, but have had little
-influence in changing their customs, for</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Custom has an ascendency over the understanding.</p>
-<p>DR. I. WATTS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>All of the villages scattered at short intervals
-along the ninety-mile drive are small; the largest
-with not more than five hundred inhabitants. In
-Papeete, and between it and Papara, the natives
-live in small frame houses, built on piling several
-feet above the ground, covered with a roof of
-corrugated iron, and made more spacious and
-comfortable by a veranda facing the road. Few
-native houses are encountered on this part of the
-journey. Beyond Papara they are the rule, and
-these retain their primitive charm. They are
-built of upright sticks of bamboo, lashed side by
-side to a frame of stripped poles in the form of
-an oval. Upon this is a heavy roof of pandanus
-thatch covering a cool, well-ventilated, sanitary
-home. The air circulates freely through the open
-spaces between the poles, as well as between the
-two doorways on opposite sides of the house.
-Mats take the place of a floor.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image43">
-<img alt="LAGOON AND REEF" src="images/Image43.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 332.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">LAGOON AND REEF ON THE NINETY-MILE ROAD</p>
-</div>
-<p>Cooking is done outside without the use of a
-stove. The native oven is a very simple affair,
-as it consists of a layer of stones upon which a
-fire is built. When heated to the requisite
-degree—and this is a matter the experienced housewife
-must determine—the food is placed amid the
-embers, wrapped in pieces of banana leaves and
-covered over with piles of damp breadfruit leaves.
-Breadfruit, taro, green bananas and plantains,
-are the articles of food prepared in this way.
-The roasting of a pig, the favorite meat of the
-South Sea Islanders, is a more complicated
-process, and to do it well requires much experience.
-A hole is dug in the ground and paved with
-stones, upon which a fire is built. When the stones
-are thoroughly heated and the fire exhausted or
-extinguished, the whole animal, properly
-prepared and wrapped in leaves, is placed in the
-pit, covered with damp leaves and loose earth.
-On great festive occasions, fowl and fish are
-added to the contents of the pit. The pork, fowl
-and fish cooked in this manner are delicious, and
-the slightly smoky taste only adds to their
-savoriness. It is the pride of the cook to remove the
-roasted pig without mutilation, usually a very
-delicate task. Chicken, boiled in the milk of the
-cocoanut, is another masterpiece of native
-cookery. The cocoanut is prepared in many ways for
-the table and a sauce made of the compressed
-juice of the grated nut, mixed with lime juice
-and sea-water, makes a most palatable sauce for
-meats and fish.</p>
-<p>House-building and housekeeping are free
-from care and never ruffle the family peace. If
-a young couple desire to establish a home of their
-own, they signify their intentions to their friends
-and neighbors. These gather, usually Sunday
-afternoon at two o'clock, at the place selected for
-the new home, bring bamboo sticks, poles and
-pandanus leaves, and at sundown the house is
-ready for occupation. The pandanus roof does
-efficient service for about seven years, when it
-has to be removed and replaced by a new one.
-The bamboo framework, properly protected, lasts
-for a much longer time. As the whole house
-consists of a single oval room, is floorless and not
-encumbered by furniture of any kind, the
-house-wife has an easy existence, more especially as
-the children can not outwear their clothing, and
-their husband's loin-cloths need no repairs.</p>
-<p>While meat in Tahiti is scarce, every family
-has an easy access to a rich fish-supply. The
-fish which swarm in the lagoons and outside of
-the reefs furnish an easily secured food-supply.
-They are caught in different ways—by hook or
-netting—and not the least picturesque way is the
-torchlight fishing on the lagoon. Torches are
-improvised of long cocoa-palm leaves tied into
-rolls. With a boat-load of these, together with
-nets and spears, the fishermen in their canoes
-paddle out upon the water after dark. Flying
-fish, attracted by the light, shoot overhead and
-are dexterously caught in a hand-net. Other
-kinds of fish, by aid of the light, are speared
-over the side of the canoe. Dolphin and bonita,
-the latter a favorite fish, are taken with the hook
-and line, in larger canoes sailing on the open sea,
-but this kind of fishing is left to a few hardy men.
-The women scoop up small river-fish in baskets,
-and drag-nets are used in capturing the many
-varieties of small fish of the lagoon. While the
-fish are being cooked in the underground oven,
-some member of the family goes into the adjacent
-forest and in a short time returns with
-breadfruit, and a variety of fruits, to make up a dainty
-and substantial repast.</p>
-<p>The island is divided into seventeen districts
-and each district has its own chief, who is
-entrusted with the local government. The chiefs
-are elected by popular vote every few years, the
-office being no longer hereditary. The chief
-resides in the principal village of his district and
-here is to be invariably found a government
-school, a Protestant and a Catholic church with
-its respective parochial school, and a
-meeting-house which serves as a gathering-place for the
-annual native plays and on all occasions of public
-concern. A daily mail supplies the rural
-population with the news of the island and keeps them
-in touch with the outside world. Abject poverty
-in the city and country is unknown, and begging
-is looked upon as a disgrace. There is neither
-wealth nor poverty in Tahiti. The people have
-all they need and all they desire, and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Poor and content is rich, and rich enough.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>I am quite sure that the tourist who has tasted
-freely of modern life such as it now is in our
-large cities, with all its cares and temptations,
-all its unrealness and disappointments, when he
-has seen the happy, contented, free-from-care
-Tahitians, in their charming island and simple
-homes, will be willing to confess:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>For my part, I should prefer to be always poor, in
-blessings such as these.</p>
-<p>HORATIUS.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>and</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Everything that exceeds the bounds of moderation
-has an unstable foundation.</p>
-<p>SENECA.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image44">
-<img alt="ON THE NINETY-MILE ROAD" src="images/Image44.jpg" style="width: 339.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">ON THE NINETY-MILE ROAD</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="point-venus">
-<h1>POINT VENUS</h1>
-<p>Every visitor to Tahiti should visit Point
-Venus, as it is a historic place near where the
-Europeans made their first landings in Matavai
-Bay, and where the first white settlers cast their
-lot with the natives. It is in this neighborhood
-where the English missionaries established their
-permanent home and from here spread the new
-tidings of the gospel over the entire island. They
-labored in vain for nearly twenty years, when all
-at once a religious wave swept over the island
-which resulted in the speedy Christianization of
-almost the entire population. I have already
-referred to Point Venus as the place where the
-government lighthouse is located and where
-Captain Cook had his headquarters when he and
-the scientists who accompanied him observed the
-transit of Venus by order of the English
-government in the year 1769. The place where the
-scientific observations were made is marked by
-a modest monument of stone surrounded by an
-iron railing, on which are inscribed the data
-commemorative of the work accomplished. Close
-by this monument, on the most prominent point,
-has been erected the lighthouse which guides
-the mariner in approaching the island during
-the night. The distance from Papeete to Point
-Venus is seven miles, over a macadamized road
-which we found in a somewhat neglected
-condition. Two native villages, Pirae and Arue, are
-passed on the way, and a third, Haapape, is close
-by. The road leads through groves of
-cocoa-palms, primeval forests and jungles, and a part
-of it skirts the foot-hills of the towering
-mountains. Most of the time the beautiful lagoon,
-dotted here and there with fishermen's canoes,
-is in sight. The calmness of the air, the solemnity
-of the surroundings and the sight of these canoes
-on the unruffled lagoon, reminded us of</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Low stir of leaves and dip of oars</p>
-<p>And lapsing waves on quiet shores.</p>
-<p>WHITTIER.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Some of the more daring fishermen we saw
-outside of the reef, in the same frail crafts,
-battling with a rougher sea, but the skilled use
-of their very primitive paddles kept the canoes
-in good motion and steady, and it seemed</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>She walks the waters like a thing of life,</p>
-<p>And seems to dare the elements to strife,</p>
-<p>BYRON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Matavai Bay, which the road follows for a
-considerable distance, is a beautiful sheet of
-water. It was in this bay that the ships of the
-early voyagers found a resting-place, and where
-on its shore the first white men touched the soil
-of Tahiti and came face to face with a people
-who had never heard of a world outside of the
-islands of the Pacific. The scenery all along
-this drive is truly tropical. The floral wealth
-is great and its variety endless. It was on this
-drive I found the passion-flower in full bloom
-and exquisite beauty.</p>
-<p>Near Point Venus we met a gang of natives,
-in charge of the chief of the district, engaged
-in repairing the road. All except the chief
-were in loin-cloths as their only article of dress.
-They worked leisurely, and smoked and chatted
-in a way that showed that they were happy even
-when bearing the burden of the day and the
-scorching rays of the tropic sun, with nothing
-in view for their ten-o'clock breakfast but the
-cool mountain water instead of coffee, breadfruit
-or plantain (<em>fei</em>) for bread, and some fruit
-gathered in the woods on their way to work.</p>
-<p>The round trip from Papeete to Point Venus
-can be made in three hours, and gives one a very
-excellent idea of the general topography of the
-island and is replete with both pleasure and
-profit.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="fautahua-valley">
-<h1>FAUTAHUA VALLEY</h1>
-<p>The next interesting short drive from Papeete
-is to the Fautahua Valley, distance four miles.
-It is noted for delightful river scenery and tropic
-vegetation, and at the end of the valley is a
-beautiful waterfall. This charming valley, with
-its typical tropic scenery enclosed by towering
-mountains and resounding with the rippling,
-dashing music of a turbulent mountain stream
-and the babbling and murmuring of the many
-brooks and rivulets of pure crystal water which
-feed it, is well worth a visit. This valley was
-once densely populated, if we can judge from the
-abundance of imported fruit trees and the coffee
-shrub which now flourish in the forest unaided
-by the care of man, while, at the present time,
-the native huts are few and far apart. Wild
-arrowroot grows here in profusion, and a variety
-of exogenous shade trees have become an
-important component part of the primeval forest,
-rendered almost impenetrable by vines and a dense
-undergrowth. A carriage-road extends to
-Fashoda Bridge, well up in the mountains,
-beyond which it leads up the gorge, past a waterfall
-which leaps over a rocky rim, where the
-mountains join to the bed of the stream, six hundred
-feet below. In different places the romantic
-mountain road is spanned by graceful arches of
-branches of the pauru tree, ambitious to find on
-the opposite side of the road an independent
-existence from the parent tree. One of the large,
-quiet pools below the Fashoda Bridge, a favorite
-bathing-place for women and their daughters,
-has been made famous by the writings of Pierre
-Loti, a French author.</p>
-<p>From Fashoda Bridge a bridle path leads up
-a very steep incline to the French military post
-in the very heart of the mountains, six thousand
-feet above the level of the sea. It was here that
-the natives made their last stand in their war
-with France. A little beyond the fort rise the
-crags which compose &quot;the Diadem,&quot; a
-conspicuous landmark in the mountains of Tahiti.</p>
-<p>The view from Fashoda Bridge in all
-directions is inspiring: at the end of the gorge the
-waterfall dashing over the volcanic rock,
-pulverized at many points in its descent into silvery
-spray; the tree-clad mountains on each side with
-their steeples of bare rock; beneath, the wild
-mountain stream, speeding to find rest in the
-quiet basin below; and all around, the rank
-vegetation which only the tropics under the most
-favorable conditions can grow, and above, the
-clear blue sky, brilliantly illuminated by the
-morning sun. As late as nine o'clock in the
-forenoon we found everything bathed in a heavy
-dew, which added much to the beauty and
-freshness of the incomparable scenery.</p>
-<p>Near the bridge, leading a pack-mule, we met
-a soldier on his way to the city for supplies
-for the small garrison in charge of the fort.
-Military duty at this lone isolated station must
-certainly prove monotonous, as from the bridge
-the only way to reach the fort is either on foot
-or mule-back. The quietude of this peaceful
-valley, at the time of our visit, was disturbed by
-a large force of native laborers who were laying
-the pipes for the new city waterworks.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image45">
-<img alt="FISHERMEN OF PAPEETE" src="images/Image45.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 338.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">FISHERMEN OF PAPEETE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="village-of-papara">
-<h1>VILLAGE OF PAPARA</h1>
-<p>The village of Papara, the largest in the
-island, has been the acknowledged stronghold of
-the Tevas for centuries. Here the powerful
-chiefs of the clan have ruled their subjects with
-an inborn sense of justice until their jurisdiction
-and, power were curtailed by foreign
-intervention. For a long time the ruling house of
-the Tevas dominated the social and political life
-of the island. It was at Papara that the largest
-and most imposing marae was built, consisting
-of a huge pile of stones in the form of a
-truncated cone, the ruins of which still remain
-as a silent reminder of the political power of
-the Tevas lone before the white man cast his
-greedy eyes upon this island paradise.</p>
-<p>The district of Papara, of which the village
-of about five hundred inhabitants is the seat of
-the local government, is the most fertile and
-prosperous of all the seventeen districts into
-which the island is at present divided. Tati
-Salmon, son of Ariitaimai, the famed chiefess
-and historian of the island, is the present chief.
-He was educated in London, is highly respected
-by the foreigners and natives alike, and owns
-about one-third of the island. He lives in a
-charming old-fashioned house, the original part
-of which was built more than a century ago. The
-house is situated at the mouth of a large
-mountain stream, and faces the broad lagoon hemmed
-in by a coral reef, over which the surf dashes
-from day to day and from year to year with the
-same regularity, with the same splashing and
-moaning sounds of the waves as they leap from
-the restless ocean beyond into the peaceful bosom
-of the calm lagoon.</p>
-<p>Papara, like all of the native villages, is located
-on the circular road familiarly known as the
-ninety-mile drive. The road from Papeete to
-Papara, a distance of twenty miles, leads through
-the most picturesque and interesting part of the
-island. The road is a genuine chaussee,
-constructed at great expense by the French
-government, and is kept in excellent repair. For the
-most part it follows the coast in full view of the
-lagoon and the ocean beyond, and, for more than
-one-half of the distance, the smaller volcanic
-sister island, Moorea, is in sight. The mountains
-are constantly in sight, ceaselessly changing in
-their aspects with distance and change of
-perspective. The narrow strip of coast-land is
-covered with a thick layer of the most productive
-soil upon a foundation of rock and red volcanic
-earth. Vegetation everywhere is rampant and
-extends from the very edge of the lagoon to the
-naked pinnacles of the mountains. In many
-places the road skirts the foot-hills, and at
-different points the precipitous mountains rise from
-the bed of the lagoon, where the road-bed had to
-be made by blasting away a part of their firm
-foundation of volcanic stone.</p>
-<p>The traveler on the whole trip is never without
-the companionship of the branchless, slender,
-graceful cocoa-palms, with their terminal crown
-of giant leaves, clusters of blossoms, and nuts of
-all sizes and stages of maturity. A stately forest
-of cocoa-palms like those found on the coast of
-Tahiti is a sight that can not fail to interest and
-fascinate the Northerner fresh from zero weather,
-snow and ice. The straight, columnar trunks,
-with their sail-like terminal fronds and clusters
-of fruit in all stages of development from the
-blossom to the golden yellow of the ripe nut, are
-objects of study and admiration which create in
-the visitor a strong and lasting attachment for
-the tropics. There is no other spot on the globe
-where the tourist can see larger and more
-beautiful palm forests than on the circular road
-between Papeete and Papara. The cocoa-palm
-is queen here, as there is no other tree among its
-many neighbors that has succeeded in equaling
-it in height. The lofty, proud head of the palm
-has no competitor; it is alone in that stratum
-of air and looks down upon the plebeian
-trees beneath with a sense of superiority, if not
-of scorn. For miles this road passes through
-magnificent forests of cocoa-palms, with a heavy
-undergrowth of guava, extending from the shore
-high up the foot-hills and mountainsides. The
-cocoa-palm is fond of salt water and thrives best
-when its innumerable slender, long roots can
-imbibe it from the briny shore.</p>
-<p>The pandanus tree is even more partial to a
-soil impregnated with salt water. On this drive
-this tree is frequently seen, and in preference at
-the very brink of the coast, with the butt-end of
-the trunk high in the air, resting on a colonnade
-of numerous powerful, slightly diverging roots.
-Another tree omnipresent on this drive is the
-pauru tree, with its large leaves and charming
-cream-yellow, salver-shaped flowers. This tree
-loves the dark, shady jungles, where its tortuous
-branches mingle freely with the dense
-undergrowth and climbing plants.</p>
-<p>The views that present themselves on this drive
-at every turn are simply bewitching and vary with
-every curve of the road. The gentle ocean
-breeze that fans the flushed face of the raptured
-traveler is lost when the road leaves the coast
-and plunges into a primeval forest, when</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Gradual sinks the breeze</p>
-<p>Into a perfect calm; that not a breath</p>
-<p>Is heard to quiver through the closing wood.</p>
-<p>THOMSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image46">
-<img alt="TAHITIAN CANOE" src="images/Image46.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 375.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">TAHITIAN CANOE WITH OUTRIGGER</p>
-</div>
-<p>As the carriage emerges from the dark shades
-of the forest into the dazzling sunlight in full
-view of the near-by ocean again.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The winds, with wonder whist,</p>
-<p>Smoothly the waters kiss'd,</p>
-<p>Whispering new joys to the mild ocean.</p>
-<p>MILTON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Every turn of the wheel on this winding road
-brings new delights. The views of mountains
-and ocean, the strange trees and flowers, the
-childlike natives and their dusky, naked children,
-the quaint villages, the turbulent mountain
-streams and the diminutive cataracts and
-waterfalls, framed in emerald green on the
-mountain-sides, enchant the eye and stimulate the mind
-every moment. These little waterfalls have
-excavated the hardest rocks and have chiseled out,
-in the course of centuries, crevices and caves of
-the strangest designs.</p>
-<p>The floral wealth of Tahiti is immense. Mr.
-McDaniel, of Los Angeles, Cal., during a
-several-months' visit to the island, analyzed and
-classified two thousand different kinds of plants. Some
-of the flowers are gorgeous, others yield a sweet
-perfume which is diffused through the pure air,
-imparting to it the balmy character for which it
-has become famous. An acquaintance with these
-flowers suggests:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Were I, O God, in churchless lands remaining,</p>
-<p>Far from all voice of teachers or divines,</p>
-<p>My soul would find, in flowers of thy ordaining,</p>
-<p>Priests, sermons, shrines.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>At a sudden turn of the road a vista is disclosed
-that defies description. In the open roadway,
-brilliantly illuminated by the noonday sun, in the
-distance, a flame-tree, with its flowers of fire,
-dazzles the eyes, and its grandeur and beauty
-increase as we approach it, while, in a few
-moments, what appeared as an apparition is
-behind us, and the tension of vision is relieved by
-a long, restful look over the limitless expanse of
-the blue sea. I have seen the flame-tree in
-different countries, but the sight of this one, with its
-magic surroundings, made a picture of exquisite
-beauty which forcibly recalled the lines:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The spreading branches made a goodly show,</p>
-<p>And full of opening blooms was ev'ry bough.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The numerous villages of land-crabs met on
-this drive afford amusement for the stranger,
-unfamiliar with this inhabitant of the coast in
-the tropics. The land-crabs have evidently a
-well-organized government in each community.
-Among the most important officials are the
-sentinels, who are always on duty, when the
-inhabitants of the village have left their underground
-habitations, to give timely notice of impending
-danger. With the approach of man, the whole
-colony is on the alert. As a matter of safety,
-the land-crab does not stray far away from its
-subterranean home. When these animals are out
-in the open they are never caught napping. Their
-large, exophthalmic eyes are never idle, and the
-instant danger threatens they speed to their place
-of safety. If you have enough patience to wait,
-you will find, sooner or later, two large staring
-eyes on a level with the hole where the animal
-disappeared. The land-crab is cautious,
-constantly on the lookout, and, on the first signal of
-danger, makes a rush for his or somebody else's
-hole.</p>
-<p>A short distance from Papeete is a truck
-garden managed by Chinamen. This enterprise, the
-only one I noticed on the drive, demonstrates well
-what the soil of Tahiti is capable of producing
-in the way of growing vegetables. It is an ideal
-vegetable garden, weedless, and verdant with all
-kinds of vegetables. The foreign population of
-the city is supplied from here with lettuce,
-asparagus, cabbage, sweet potatoes, carrots, onions,
-turnips and melons of the choicest quality. The
-natives have no use for vegetables and make no
-attempts to raise them for the market. The
-guava shrub is found everywhere. It has infested
-the country, weed-like, and its golden fruit is not
-appreciated by the natives; only a very small part
-of the fruit is gathered for making jelly, one of
-the few articles of export.</p>
-<p>This is the part of the island where the
-vanilla-bean is most extensively cultivated. A vanilla
-plantation is a jungle in which the bean thrives
-best. In the thick woods all along the road, the
-climbing bean is seen trailing up the shrubs and
-trees, often to a height of twenty feet. At the
-time of my visit the blossoms had disappeared
-and the green beans had reached a length of
-about four inches, half their length when they are
-ripe. A patient and prolonged search made for
-a flower was finally rewarded by the finding of a
-belated bud which, on being placed in water,
-expanded into a flower during the night, affording
-me an opportunity to study its anatomy.</p>
-<p>Three small villages, Faaa, Punaauia and Paea,
-are passed on the way from Papeete to Papara,
-and, like all other villages, each of them had
-its own government school, a Catholic and a
-Protestant church, and, connected with these, two
-parochial schools. The compulsory education
-introduced into the island applies to children from
-six to sixteen years of age. The churches are
-well attended, but I was informed by a German,
-who has resided in Tahiti for thirty years, that
-the people attend service more as a matter of
-amusement than with any intention of obtaining
-spiritual benefit.</p>
-<p>Nearly all of the village shops are kept by
-Chinamen, and it is needless to say that these
-shrewd foreigners take undue advantage of the
-simple, trusting natives, in all of their business
-transactions. Much of the hard-earned money of
-the natives finds its way into the capacious
-pockets of these enterprising Orientals.</p>
-<p>We reached Papara toward evening, and, when
-we came in sight of the chiefery, were deeply
-impressed with the beauty of the location. Palm
-trees, flowering shrubs and garden flowers adorn
-the spacious grounds in front and all around the
-ancient mansion which is perched on an elevated
-plateau adjoining the large and beautiful stream
-of crystal mountain water, and facing the placid
-lagoon. An immense double war-canoe was at
-anchor in the river. It is now used as a
-fishing-boat by one of the sons of the chief, when he
-desires to catch the bonita outside of the lagoon.
-It takes seven men to manage this giant canoe,
-by means of paddles.</p>
-<p>In front of the wide veranda of the one-story
-house is an ornamental tree which spreads its
-branches at least twenty feet in all directions.
-As it was in full bloom at the time of my visit,
-it added much to the beauty and comfort of the
-immediate surroundings in front of the house.</p>
-<p>The rooms of the mansion are large, and
-brimful of local antiquities and old furniture imported
-from Europe, which impart to them a coziness
-and charm which have been greatly appreciated
-and gratefully remembered by many a welcome
-visitor. It is in a house like this, presided over by
-the chief of Papara and his charming family, that
-one can experience what genuine, unselfish
-hospitality means.</p>
-<p>Twelve servants, men and women, take
-care of the house, the family and the visitors.
-Most of these were born on the place, and some
-of them, very old now, were in the service of the
-grandfather of the present chief. The relation
-between master and servants in this house is a
-very pleasant one. The servants are looked upon
-and treated rather as relatives than employes.
-Their pay is small, but they are given all the
-comforts of a home.</p>
-<p>Word had been sent ahead from Papeete
-announcing our visit, for the purpose of securing
-for us the rare pleasure of partaking of a
-genuine native dinner. A little pig was roasted
-underground, and chickens were boiled in the
-milk of the cocoanut, exquisite dishes, which,
-with excellent coffee, French bread, and a variety
-of luscious tropical fruit, made up a dinner which
-it would be impossible to duplicate in any of the
-large cities of the continents.</p>
-<p>The village of Papara is a most interesting
-place to visit. Besides the magnificent scenery,
-one finds here many native huts, and the town
-hall is a large, airy structure, built of bamboo
-sticks and covered with a thatched roof. Near
-the village are the grotto and cave, which enjoy
-a local reputation, and are well worth seeing by
-the visitor.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The sun's rim dips; the stars rush out:</p>
-<p>At one stride conies the dark;</p>
-<p>With far-heard whisper o'er the sea;</p>
-<p>Off shot the spectre bark.</p>
-<p>COLERIDGE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The day had been hot and sultry. From a
-cloudless sky, the tropical sun shot down, without
-mercy, his arrows of heat, against which the
-lightest and most porous headdress, umbrella,
-roof and shade afforded but inadequate protection.
-Man and beast were listless, perspiring, careful
-to make no unnecessary exertion. The green,
-succulent foliage bowed under the oppressive
-heat, and even the gayest of the flowers drooped
-their proud heads in homage to the fierce
-king of the serene blue sky. The very
-atmosphere quivered in convulsive movements,
-and the intense light, reflected from the surface
-of the sleeping ocean and the white city, dazzled
-and blinded those who ventured to go out into
-the streets. The little capital city of Papeete,
-nestled on the plateau between the harbor and
-the foot of towering mountains, half hidden
-among the tropic trees, was at rest; market and
-streets deserted, business houses closed, and the
-wharf silent and lifeless. The numerous
-miserable curs in the streets sought shelter in the shade,
-lying in a position affording most perfect
-relaxation, with protruded, blue, saliva-covered tongues,
-fighting the heat by increasing the respiratory
-movements to the utmost speed. The
-numerous half-wild pigs in the streets, with paralyzed
-tails and relaxed bristles, buried themselves as
-deeply as possible in the nearest mud-pool, and
-with eyes closed, submitted passively to the fiery
-rays of the midday sun. The roaming chickens,
-from bald chicks a few days old to the ruffled,
-fatless veterans of questionable age, suspended
-their search for rare particles of food with which
-to satisfy their torturing sense of hunger, and
-simply squatted where the heat overcame them,
-in the nearest shady place, there to spend the
-enforced siesta with bills wide open and the dry,
-blue tongues agitated by the rapid and violent
-breathing. The birds of the air ceased their frolic;
-their song was silenced, and they took refuge in
-trees with thickest foliage. Men, women and
-children, rich and poor, merchant and laborer,
-were forced to suspend work and play, and seek,
-in the shadow of their homes or near-by trees,
-protection against the onslaught of the burning
-rays of the sun. Such is the victory of the sun
-of the tropics. He demands unconditional
-surrender on the part of every living thing. He
-knows no compromise, as he is sure of victory as
-long as his victim is in a favorable strategic
-position. This was the case on the day of which I
-speak. As the rays of the sun became more and
-more oblique, and the invisible great fan of the
-land-breeze was set in motion, wafting down
-from the high mountain peaks a current of cool
-air, the city woke up from its midday slumber.
-The sun had lost his fiery power. He was
-retreating from the field of combat, and
-approaching in the distance the rim of the placid ocean.
-The monarch of the day, so near his cool, watery
-couch, laid aside his mask of fire and smiled
-upon the vanishing world with a face beaming
-with happiness and peace.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The sun was set, and Vesper, to supply</p>
-<p>His absent beams, had lighted up the sky.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-<p>It was an evening bright and still</p>
-<p>As ever blush'd on wave or bower,</p>
-<p>Smiling from heaven, as if naught ill</p>
-<p>Could happen in so sweet an hour.</p>
-<p>MOORE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The last act of the retiring monarch of the day
-revealed his incomparable skill as a painter.
-He showed discretion in the selection of the time
-to demonstrate to the best advantage his
-matchless artistic skill. He chose the evening hour,
-when the soul is best prepared to take flight from
-earthly to heavenly things. He waited until man
-and beast had laid aside the burden and cares of
-the day, and were in a receptive, contemplative
-mood to study and appreciate the paintings
-suspended from the paling blue dome of the sky.</p>
-<p>He waited until he could hide himself from view
-behind the bank of fleecy clouds moving lazily in
-the same direction. Then he grasped the
-invisible palette charged with colors and tints of
-colors unknown to the artists of this world, and
-seized the mystic, gigantic brush when</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The setting sun, and music at the close.</p>
-<p>As the last taste of sweets is sweeted last,</p>
-<p>Writ in remembrance more than things long past.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The time for this magic work was short. The
-moment the passing clouds veiled his face it
-began. From the very beginning it became
-apparent that the hidden artist exhibited
-superhuman skill. The most appreciative and
-scrutinizing of his admirers felt powerless to
-comprehend and much more to give a description of the
-panoramic views which he painted with such
-rapid succession on the sky, clouds and the dull
-surface of the dreamy, listless ocean. With
-intense interest we watched the constantly varying,
-artistic display, felt keenly the shortcomings of
-human art, and realized, to the fullest extent, the
-force and truth of</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Who hath not proved how feebly words essay</p>
-<p>To fix one spark of beauty's heavenly ray.</p>
-<p>BYRON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image47">
-<img alt="PAPAYA TREES" src="images/Image47.jpg" style="width: 341.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">TWO PAPAYA TREES</p>
-</div>
-<p>All painters place the greatest importance upon
-a proper background for their pictures in order
-to give light and shade a strong expression. So
-does the sun. With a few strokes of the magic
-brush, the deep blue of the horizon was wiped
-out and replaced by the palest shade of blue, so
-as to bring forth, in bolder relief, the resplendent
-colors on the moving canvas of the clouds. The
-artist fringed the margins of the clouds with
-delicate lace of shining gold. Through clefts
-and rents in the clouds the smiling face of the
-painter peeped upon the beautiful evening
-beyond. His work had only begun. In rapid turns
-the clouds were converted into a sheet of gold
-with a violet border that deepened into a vivid
-crimson hue. As the artist disappeared, inch by
-inch, under the limitless expanse of the ocean,
-he wiped out the brilliant colors on the canvas of
-clouds, and gilded the horizon with a sheet of
-gold, deepening his favorite color, yellow, into an
-orange hue, which remained unchanged until the
-approaching darkness threw a drapery of sombre
-black over the inspiring scene. Twilight shuns
-the tropics. Day lapses into night almost
-imperceptibly, and, with the setting of the sun, the
-earth is wrapped in darkness. There is no
-compromise in the tropics, between the rulers of day
-and night. With the disappearance of the last
-rays of the sun, the pale blue dome of the sky is
-decorated with millions of flickering stars,
-casting their feeble light upon land and sea through
-the immeasurable ethereal medium which
-separates heaven from earth.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The sun has lost his rage; his downward orb</p>
-<p>Shoots nothing now but animating warmth</p>
-<p>And vital lustre.</p>
-<p>THOMSON.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>On the evening of which I speak, the short
-twilight foreshadowed the appearance of the
-heavenly advance-guard proclaiming the coming
-of the Queen of Night.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>When the evening King gave place to night,</p>
-<p>His beams he to his royal brother lent,</p>
-<p>And so shone still in his reflected light.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Looking in the direction opposite from where
-the monarch of the day had disappeared, the
-cloudless sky brightened over the bare gray
-mountain-peak, and the stars, in joyful
-anticipation of the approaching event, abandoned their
-stoic immobility and trembled in feverish
-excitement. An impressive silence reigned in the little
-city, broken now and then by the almost
-noiseless footsteps of half-naked, barefoot natives, or
-the clattering of the hoofs of a horse and
-humming of the wheels of a passing cart, and, once
-or twice, by the whirr of the only automobile in
-the island, steered by an enterprising, prosperous
-French merchant.</p>
-<p>Nature awoke from her noonday slumber, the
-glossy leaves resumed their natural shape and
-freshness, the drooping flowers revived,
-expanded and exhaled their fragrance, perfuming
-the evening air. The birds had found shelter and
-protection for the night in the leafy domes of
-the many beautiful shade and ornamental trees.
-It was solemn eveningtide, when the heart of
-man is most receptive for noble and pure
-impressions. It was the time to turn away the thoughts
-from the busy, selfish world and reflect upon the
-wonders of creation. It was the time to look
-upward to the calm, pale, blue sky, feebly
-illuminated by the soft light of countless tiny lamps
-suspended by invisible cords from the limitless
-space above. It was the time to look beyond
-earthly things. It was the time to understand:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>The beauty of the world and the orderly arrangement
-of everything celestial makes us confess that there is
-an excellent and eternal nature, which ought to be
-worshiped and admired by all mankind.</p>
-<p>CICERO.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>We were speechless spectators of the passing
-and coming. Our thoughts were turned to the
-invisible hand that created the earth we inhabit
-and all of the heavenly bodies, and which directs
-their movements with infallible precision and
-unfailing regularity. We thought of things
-incomprehensible to man, of things far beyond the
-grasp of the human mind, of things known only
-to the Almighty Lord, Creator of all things in
-heaven and earth.</p>
-<p>With our eyes fixed on the gateway of entrance
-of the Queen of Night, we patiently awaited her
-arrival, anxious, however, to catch the first
-glimpse of her beautiful face. No blare of
-trumpets or bugle call announced her approach. She
-rose in the sky silently, resplendent in her own
-magic beauty, and her charms are always
-sweetest when the nights are calm and peaceful. She
-combined beauty with two of the most attractive
-feminine virtues—modesty and gentleness. As
-we watched her regal entrance into the sky, the
-golden arch assumed the deep yellow hue of the
-precious metal it resembled, and, in a few
-moments, the pale rim of her sweet face rose over
-the dark, bald mountain-peak, and ascended
-slowly and majestically, higher and higher, away
-from earthly things, on her journey through the
-pathless sky. This evening she appeared in
-perfect glory, permitting us to look into her full,
-calm face. Her consort, the sun, had just
-disappeared, leaving behind him a golden crescent
-on the opposite horizon. She was following his
-pathway and had taken possession of his throne
-for the night. The departing sun and the
-ascending moon were in strange and pleasing
-contrast at the threshold of that beautiful night.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>O! belle nuit! mit preferable au jour!</p>
-<p>Premier nuit a amour consacree!</p>
-<p>En sa faveur, prolonge ta duree,</p>
-<p>Et du soleil retarde le retour.</p>
-<p>DE MALFILATRE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>The moon loves to reign in peace and quietude.
-She abhors the tumult of the battle-field and the
-struggles of man for wealth and honor. She is
-the friend of the wounded, the sick and the poor;
-and the guardian angel of all those in need of
-repose. As she ascended heavenward, the
-rippling ocean became a great mirror, a mirror
-worthy to reflect her beautiful face. The soft,
-pale light streaming out from the silvery orb
-cast phantom-like shadows in the forests, parks
-and streets. Solemnity reigned supreme.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>On seas, on earth, and all that in them dwell,</p>
-<p>A death-like and deep silence fell.</p>
-<p>WALLER.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>Happy the people who respect and love the
-Queen of Night and her reign of peace and rest!
-Charming Queen! Retard your journey,
-prolong your peaceful mission for the well-being of
-your loyal subjects so much in need of your
-calming influence and of your soft, soothing
-light! To such petitions the goddess of the sky
-has only one inflexible reply: &quot;The universe is
-my kingdom, the earth you live in is only one
-of my smallest possessions. I must remain loyal
-to all of my realms.&quot;</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image48">
-<img alt="PICKING COCOANUTS" src="images/Image48.jpg" style="width: 347.0px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">PICKING COCOANUTS</p>
-</div>
-<p>This evening in Tahiti had another and still
-more sublime entertainment in store for us, a
-spectacle which can be seen in perfection only in
-the tropics, and, I imagine, Tahiti is the stage
-more perfect than any other in the world for the
-display of one of nature's grandest exhibitions.
-The soft light of the rising moon and the myriads
-of tiny, flickering stars furnished the
-illumination; the mountains, forests, harbor and ocean, the
-stage. We were roused from our reverie by
-distant peals of thunder. Looking in the
-direction whence these reports came, we saw black,
-angry clouds hovering about the mountain-peaks
-to the south and east of Papeete. The clouds
-were too heavy for the rarified mountain air and
-soon began to descend slowly but steadily until
-they wrapped the towering summits in a cloak
-of sombre black. The mountain-peaks, which
-but a short time before were caressed by the
-gentle, silvery light of the moon, were now
-completely obscured. Where did these clouds come
-from? No one could tell. No one could
-mistake their movements. They appeared to have
-had only one object in view, and that was to
-embrace the mountain-range well below the
-tree-line. Smaller clouds, fragments from the main
-mass, moving more swiftly in the evening air,
-impelled by the land-breeze, floated away from
-the dark wall enveloping the mountainsides,
-which seemed to possess some subtle, magnetic
-power buried in the Immense piles of volcanic
-rocks. At short intervals, great zigzag chains of
-lightning shot through these dark clouds,
-momentarily lighting up the dark, unbroken,
-primeval forest. These dazzling, blinding flashes of
-lightning were in strong contrast with the soft,
-tropic moonshine that remained outside of the
-limits of the aerial sea of clouds, which had
-commenced to discharge a drenching rain. Fleecy
-little wandering clouds now flecked the horizon,
-strangely and variously painted by the
-moonlight, shortly before the midnight hour. Through
-fissures in these fleeting, snowy clouds, the moon
-and stars often peeped at the grand spectacle
-which was being enacted on the stage below.
-Lightning and thunder came nearer and nearer
-with the approach of the weeping mass of clouds.
-The bolts of lightning must have found their
-marks with unerring precision in the crags and
-forest underneath the roof of dense clouds, as
-from there came at short intervals deafening
-peals of thunder reverberating through the calm
-evening air far out over the surface of the
-sleeping ocean, where the reverberations died out
-in a faint rumbling.</p>
-<p>This majestic but awesome sight was of short
-duration. The pouring rain relieved the clouds
-of their abnormal weight, and, balloon-like, they
-rose, clearing the mountain-range, which then
-again made its appearance in the soft, bewitching
-moonlight of the tropics. Lightning and thunder
-retreated with the disappearance of the clouds.
-The atmosphere was cool and refreshing, purified
-by the pouring rain and the furious electric storm.
-At this stage of the nightly display in our
-immediate vicinity, in front of the veranda of the little
-hotel, in full view of the now deserted stage,
-from the clear, cloudless sky, gigantic drops of
-rain fell, sparkling in the magic moonlight like
-diamonds that had become loosened and had
-fallen from the jeweled crown of the Queen of
-Night, whose throne had then reached the zenith
-of the horizon.</p>
-<p>Instead of wishing for an encore after such a
-brilliant act given by nature's artists, we took
-one more and last look at the serene, smiling, full
-face of the moon, and were then prepared to
-acknowledge reverently:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>What else is nature but God, and divine reason,
-residing in the whole world and its parts.</p>
-<p>SENECA.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="iorana">
-<h1>IORANA!</h1>
-<p>The South Sea Islanders have beautiful words
-of welcome with which they meet the stranger.
-The Samoan greets you with <em>talofa</em>; the
-Hawaiian, with a clear, musical voice, welcomes you
-with <em>aloha nui</em>; and the Tahitian, with an open,
-friendly face and a smile, when he meets you,
-addresses you with that beautiful greeting,
-<em>iorana</em>. These euphonious words mean more
-than the words of our language intended for the
-same purpose; they come from the heart and are
-addressed to the heart much more so than our
-&quot;Welcome,&quot; &quot;How do you do?&quot; &quot;How are you?&quot;
-or &quot;I am glad to see you.&quot; These Polynesian
-words are not only words of welcome, but carry
-with them the best wishes of the natives for the
-stranger; they signify not only a formality, but
-also express a sincerity which is so often lacking
-in our conventional meetings with friends and
-strangers. The visitor who remains long enough
-in Tahiti to become acquainted with the natives
-will find that their greeting, <em>iorana</em>, is verified
-by their actions. The natives, educated and
-ignorant, young and old, are polite, friendly and
-hospitable to a fault. They are fond of making
-little gifts to strangers, and if these are
-reciprocated, they are really and honestly grateful.
-The people are charming, the island beautiful,
-and nature's storehouse never empty of the
-choicest that the sea can supply and the soil
-can produce. Any one who has seen Tahiti, the
-Island Paradise, on leaving it, and ever after,
-in recalling his experiences and observations in
-this island of peace, rest, charms and pleasures,
-will give expression to his feelings by repeating
-to himself.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Isle of Beauty!</p>
-<p>Absence makes the heart grow fonder:</p>
-<p>Isle of Beauty, fare thee well!</p>
-<p>BAYLY.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p align="center"><strong>THE END</strong></p>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="addenda">
-<h1>ADDENDA</h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>TAHITI</p>
-<p>The waves that touch thy pebbly beach</p>
-<blockquote>
-With soft, caressing hand;</blockquote>
-<p>The scented breezes winging past</p>
-<blockquote>
-Above thy favored land;</blockquote>
-<p>The brilliant flowers, the glowing fruits,</p>
-<blockquote>
-Close to thy bosom pressed,</blockquote>
-<p>All, all are singing one sweet song,</p>
-<blockquote>
-Whose soft refrain is, Rest!</blockquote>
-<p>The sunset brush that tints thy skies</p>
-<blockquote>
-With wondrous, varied rays;</blockquote>
-<p>The birds that fill thy woodland haunts</p>
-<blockquote>
-With music's roundelays;</blockquote>
-<p>The sparkling streams meandering through</p>
-<blockquote>
-Thy valleys ever blest.</blockquote>
-<p>All, all are breathing one sweet song.</p>
-<blockquote>
-Whose soft refrain is, Rest!</blockquote>
-<p>The twilight hour that floods the soul</p>
-<blockquote>
-With waves of perfect calm.</blockquote>
-<p>Then gives us to the Queen of Night,</p>
-<blockquote>
-Who pours her soothing balm;</blockquote>
-<p>The still lagoon with coral reefs</p>
-<blockquote>
-Where beauty makes its nest.</blockquote>
-<p>All, all are breathing one sweet song.</p>
-<blockquote>
-Whose soft refrain is, Rest!</blockquote>
-<p>O Isle of Beauty! poets may</p>
-<blockquote>
-Dip pens in wells of light,</blockquote>
-<p>Or soar aloft on Fancy's wings</p>
-<blockquote>
-In wild, aerial flight;</blockquote>
-<p>But they can never voice thy charms,</p>
-<blockquote>
-O Island of the Blest!</blockquote>
-<p>Whose very air is perfumed with</p>
-<blockquote>
-The fragrance rare of Rest!</blockquote>
-<p>O Isle of Beauty! artists may</p>
-<blockquote>
-Coax every varied hue,</blockquote>
-<p>To lay upon the canvas wide</p>
-<blockquote>
-A portrait true of you;</blockquote>
-<p>But till they borrow heaven's power</p>
-<blockquote>
-To paint thee. Island Blest,</blockquote>
-<p>The task is vain, O Land of Peace,</p>
-<blockquote>
-Whose every breeze sings Rest!</blockquote>
-<p>Where man knows all the blissful charm</p>
-<blockquote>
-Of care-free, deep content;</blockquote>
-<p>Where life seems one long holiday</p>
-<blockquote>
-In childish gladness spent;</blockquote>
-<p>Where earth and air and sea and sky</p>
-<blockquote>
-So close to God seem pressed;</blockquote>
-<p>Ah, loath am I to turn from thee.</p>
-<blockquote>
-Dear Land of Perfect Rest!</blockquote>
-<p>MARY E. GRIFFIN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image49">
-<img alt="ALLIGATOR PEAR TREE" src="images/Image49.jpg" style="width: 396.5px; height: 600.0px;" />
-<p class="caption">ALLIGATOR PEAR TREE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class="section" id="the-story-of-ariitaimai-of-tahiti">
-<h1>THE STORY OF ARIITAIMAI OF TAHITI <a class="footnote-reference" href="#id3" id="id2">[1]</a></h1>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I wish peace, and any terms prefer</p>
-<p>Before the last extremities of war.</p>
-<p>DRYDEN.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In one of the far-off isles of the South Seas,
-in the garden-spot of the Pacific, in golden
-Tahiti, about the year 1848, when Victoria was
-a young queen and mother, when France was in
-the throes of a second revolution, when the
-United States, a young republic, was still on trial
-before the old world, there was enacted one of
-the most touching dramas history has ever
-recorded, and this among a people considered
-savages by the so-called civilized world, and
-almost unknown until discovered through the
-missionary fervor of a few priests. The place,
-a small island, only a speck on the map; the
-<em>dramatis personæ</em>, France, England and
-America, the hereditary chiefs of a people who for
-forty generations had known no other rulers,
-a weak, vacillating native queen, and a
-noble-hearted native woman who knew how to be at
-the same time a loyal subject, a skilled diplomat,
-and that rarer and more beautiful thing, a
-faithful friend. If you would hear a story of
-friendship pure and undefiled, listen to the story of
-Ariitaimai of Papara, a Tahitian of noble birth,
-a child of Nature in its wildest and grandest
-aspect, rocked in a gigantic cradle of sea, sky
-and towering mountains, in a land of palm
-forests, where Nature has provided everything
-necessary to the life of her children, and where
-the pearls are the purest. If Cicero had known
-the story of Ariitaimai he would not have
-written in <em>De Amicitia:</em> &quot;But where will you find
-one who will not prefer to friendship, public
-honors and power, one who will prefer the
-advancement of his friend in public office to
-his own? For human nature is too weak to
-despise power.&quot; But to understand this
-thrilling and eventful drama, we must listen first to
-the chorus reciting something of the history of
-this strange people, and of the position of
-woman in a land where suffrage societies are
-unknown, and where the story of the inequality
-of the sexes had never been told by book or
-priest. Tahiti, Matea and Moorea are known
-as the Windward Islands of the Society Group
-in the South Seas. The Leeward Islands
-comprise the four kingdoms, Huahine, Borabora,
-Raiatea and Tahaa, together with some smaller
-islands, and are about one hundred and twenty
-miles from Tahiti. But it has always been in
-Tahiti, the gem of the Pacific, that the interest
-has been centered, and it was here that the
-struggle took place between the English and
-the French for supremacy in the South Seas.</p>
-<table class="docutils footnote" frame="void" id="id3" rules="none">
-<colgroup><col class="label" /><col /></colgroup>
-<tbody valign="top">
-<tr><td class="label"><a class="fn-backref" href="#id2">[1]</a></td><td>This chapter is the product of the fertile pen of Dr. Lucy Waite. Surgeon-in-Chief of the Mary Thompson Hospital, Chicago.</td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-<p>It was in 1769 that Captain Cook entered
-Matavai Bay on his first voyage to observe the
-transit of Venus. This spot is marked by a
-stone monument and has been known ever since
-as Point Venus. At this time Cook estimated
-the number of inhabitants at two hundred
-thousand. To-day, after the long contention between
-the French and English for supremacy, after
-the brave struggle of the natives against both
-for independence, after all the ravages made by
-the diseases introduced by foreigners, and
-after years of a fearful mortality caused by the
-enervating effect of civilization upon a people
-suited only to be children of Nature, this goodly
-number has been reduced to a pitiful eleven
-thousand. In fact, our so-called nineteenth
-century civilization has succeeded in practically
-exterminating a people who could produce a
-pearl among womankind, a rare and tender
-soul, such an one as English history does not
-give us, and France has produced but one, her
-own Jeanne D'Arc.</p>
-<p>The government of the island has always been
-by chiefs and chiefesses, no distinction of sex
-being made in laws of inheritance, the eldest
-born inheriting the rank and estates and all the
-authority which the title of chief conveys.
-Many of the chiefesses appear to have been
-exceedingly warlike, true Amazons, contending
-with neighboring chiefs for more authority and
-extensive possessions. Even as wives of the
-chiefs, women went to war to help fight the
-battles of their husbands and clans. It is
-reported of one of the Pomares who was of a
-peaceful disposition that in one hotly contested
-encounter he fled to a neighboring island,
-leaving his wife Iddeah to face the storm. History
-says that she was a great warrior and carried
-the contest to a successful issue for her husband
-and their possessions. It is recorded of another
-chief that he was not a warrior and left the
-active campaigning to his wife. So it will be
-seen that in the political life of Tahiti sex was
-not considered. Accident of birth settled the
-title, and the warlike spirit miade the warrior,
-whether it resided in chief or chiefess. England
-took a hand in the island politics at a time when
-one of the weakest and most unpopular chiefs
-was warring for the supremacy, and by assisting
-and upholding his authority prolonged one of
-the most disastrous wars in the history of Tahiti.
-The Tahitians detested tyranny and the
-insolence of a single ruler, and in their tribal system
-of chiefs had a protection against despotism
-which the foreigners, by their advocacy of the
-cause of a special chief, afterwards Pomare I.,
-destroyed.</p>
-<p>Before the invasion of the English, the
-hereditary chief of each district held absolute sway
-in his own province. Questions of common
-interest were settled in the island councils by
-majority vote, and it was in these deliberations
-that the chiefs of Papara had for generations
-held the balance of political power. Politically,
-the change was disastrous. In olden times
-whenever a single chief became arrogant and
-threatened to destroy the rest, all the others united to
-overthrow him and thus re-established the
-political equilibrium.</p>
-<p>Ariitaimai belonged to the Clan of Tevas, of
-the chiefery of Papara, and the family of Tati.
-She belonged to the clan which was ruled by
-Opuhara, the last of the heathen chiefs who
-went down in the conflict with Pomare II.,
-who with the help of English guns was made
-absolute monarch of the island. This conflict
-between Opuhara and the English, because
-Pomare was only an instrument in their hands
-to accomplish the conquest of the island, is
-responsible for the bitter hatred of the genuine
-natives for the foreigners and the missionaries.</p>
-<p>Opuhara was considered the greatest warrior
-and hero of the Tevas, and his death, the result
-of a stratagem on the part of Pomare and the
-English missionaries, is considered by his people
-a veritable assassination. He fell by a shot fired
-by a native missionary convert. Tati, one of the
-under-chiefs of Papara, had been persuaded by
-the English to approach Opuhara to negotiate
-with him for submission. But Opuhara turned
-on him with scorn. &quot;Go, traitor,&quot; he said;
-&quot;shame on you! you, whom I knew as my eldest
-brother, I know no more; and to-day I call this
-my spear, 'Ourihere,' brotherless. Beware of it,
-for if it meet you hereafter, it meets you as a foe.
-I, Opuhara, have stood as Arii in Mona Temaiti,
-bowing to no other Gods but those of my fathers.
-There I shall stand to the end; and never shall
-I bow to Pomara or to the Gods forced on us
-by the white-faced man.&quot; With Opuhara
-perished the last hope of the native patriots to
-preserve a government of chiefs. His dying
-words were all that was left to his clan of the
-glory and power of Papara. &quot;My children,
-fight to the last! It is noon, and I, Opuhara,
-the <em>ti</em> of Mona Temaiti, am broken asunder!&quot;
-He fell a martyr to his belief in the heathen
-gods, and in the ancient inherited rights of his
-people: a tribal government. His followers
-have always firmly believed that Opuhara would
-have won the contest had not the missionaries
-brought their guns along with their Bibles.</p>
-<p>It was this belief that Ariitaimai inherited
-with the beautiful lands of Papara. She says in
-her memoirs: &quot;I am told that Opuhara's spear,
-'Brotherless Ourihere,' is now in the Museum
-of the Louvre. Even in those days there were
-among all his warriors only two who could
-wield it. If the missionaries have sometimes
-doubted whether the natives rightly understood
-the truths and blessings of Christianity, perhaps
-one reason may be that the Tevas remember how
-the missionaries fought for Pomare and killed
-Opuhara.&quot;</p>
-<p>Marama, the mother of Ariitaimai, was a
-celebrated chiefess in her own right, the sole
-heir of Marama, the head chief of Moorea, the
-nearest island to Tahiti. She was a great heiress,
-and the last representative of the sacred families
-of these two islands. She was given in
-marriage, as a political compromise and at the
-special request of King Pomare, to Tati's son, the
-head chief of Tahiti. It was also agreed that
-all issue of the marriage should become the
-adopted children of Pomare, according to an
-ancient Tahitian custom. The family is a great
-institution in Tahiti and any one whose parents
-both by birth and adoption had been carried to
-the family Marae with offerings to the gods,
-enjoyed a rare social distinction. This
-Ariitaimai could claim, so from her birth she was
-looked upon by the islanders as an especially
-favored and much-to-be-treasured maiden. It
-may be that this great respect shown towards
-her by the entire people did much to mold her
-character. The Tahitian mother has little to say
-in regard to the training of her first-born, as
-this one is considered to belong to the family
-as a whole, and all questions of general interest
-are settled in family council. And so it was
-with Ariitaimai. She saw little of her mother,
-but was in constant touch with the family chiefs
-from whom, no doubt, she learned lessons in
-diplomacy, and from listening to their councils
-she acquired that rare good judgment which
-fitted her later to be the accepted advisor of her
-teachers. She mastered both the French and
-the English languages, and her memoirs show
-a wonderful knowledge of the literature of both
-countries, as well as a wide and comprehensive
-reading of classical authors. While Ariitaimai
-was growing to womanhood, the pride and
-special care of the chiefs of Papara, another maiden
-was receiving equal care and attention on a
-neighboring island. Aimata of Raiatea, the
-daughter of Pomare II., was only nine years
-old when her father died and she was given into
-the care of the head chief Uata, who was a good
-and learned man.</p>
-<div class="figure align-center" id="image50">
-<img alt="MASKED WARRIORS" src="images/Image50.jpg" style="width: 600.0px; height: 382.5px;" />
-<p class="caption">ANCIENT MASKED WARRIORS</p>
-</div>
-<p>These two young girls who were destined to
-play such an important rôle in the history of
-their country, grew up under much the same
-influences and developed characters as widely
-different as the antipodes. They saw each other
-only occasionally until Aimata's mother sent one
-day for Ariitaimai to make a long visit at the
-royal castle, as was the custom among the
-islanders, as Pomare had claimed her as his
-adopted daughter according to the ante-natal
-contract. Here blossomed and grew the
-friendship which was destined later to save to Pomare
-IV. her throne, and to deliver Tahiti from a war
-which could only have resulted in the
-extermination of the native population and the destruction
-of the island as an independent government. The
-real struggle between France and England for
-the possession of the island began in 1836, when
-two French priests landed at Tahiti to convert
-not the pagans to Christianity but Protestant
-Christians to the Roman faith. Aimata now
-become Pomare IV., promptly ordered their
-arrest and expulsion. The French priests made
-a protest to their government and Louis Philippe
-sent a frigate to Papeete, the harbor city, with
-an ultimatum, and the Queen was obliged to
-yield. The English consul and the missionaries
-contested the occupation of the French, and
-another frigate was sent to Tahiti. Queen
-Pomare now appealed to Queen Victoria and
-offered to submit to a British protectorate. She
-also sent a protest to the government of the
-United States, against allowing the French to
-forcibly occupy Tahiti. But the English Queen
-was busy with more important home affairs, and
-neglected the appeal from the little island so far
-away, and the protest to the United States was
-apparently ignored. By a lack of appreciation
-of the Queen's communication, the United States
-lost the control of the gem of all the Pacific
-isles, and lost also a rare opportunity to aid
-and protect a brave people in their struggle for
-independence. This attitude of England and the
-United States left the contest to be settled
-between the natives and the French. After a
-desultory war lasting over four long, miserable
-years, with the advantage first on one side and
-then on the other, the French government decided
-to end the matter and sent two frigates to the
-island. The government had offered previously
-to this to place Pomare permanently on the
-throne under a French protectorate, but she
-would not consent to this, looking constantly for
-help from the English who had done so much
-for her father. So she left Tahiti, the scene of
-the contest, and fled to Raiatea to her own
-family for protection, while waiting for the help
-which never came.</p>
-<p>Ariitaimai, in her own beautiful home at Papara,
-pondered over the wretched state of her beloved
-country and her heart was sore both for her
-idolized friend and poor bleeding Tahiti. Was
-there no way out of this Slough of Despond into
-which the foreigners had plunged her unhappy
-country? She knew the temper of the island
-chiefs and that they had sworn to die fighting
-for the independence of their country. She
-remembered the fate of Tati, who had been
-branded a traitor with Opuhara's last breath
-because he counseled submission to the English,
-and she dared not propose to them any
-compromising measures. She looked out despairingly
-over the trackless sea, and appealingly up at the
-towering mountains which had been her
-companions during prosperity and adversity, but no
-answer came to her anxious questionings. Then
-suddenly, one day, word was brought to her by an
-old woman of her clan that two French frigates
-had landed in the harbor of Tahiti. She knew
-this meant the end, unless Queen Pomare could
-be persuaded to return to Tahiti and accept the
-offer of the French. The old crone who had
-brought her the news said to her: &quot;Don't you
-know that you are the first in the Island, and
-that it remains in your hands to save all this
-and your land?&quot; Then Ariitaimai hesitated no
-longer, but hastened to the governor and told
-him what she had heard. He replied: &quot;You have
-heard the truth. The colonel commanding the
-troops has heard of so many instances of insult
-given to the French that we have decided at last
-to go out and finish up the affair.&quot; This brusque
-answer aroused in Ariitaimai all the stored-up
-energy of years. She became immediately the
-diplomatic representative of her people, and
-begged the governor to give her a few days that
-she might see the chiefs and make at least an
-effort to avert the terrible havoc to lives and
-property which this would cause. Ariitaimai was
-well known to the governor, and although
-evidently amused that a young woman should take
-upon herself this difficult task, readily consented.
-Like two generals they sat down and talked over
-all the terms of the peace; the governor agreeing
-to restore Pomare to her throne if she would
-return immediately, and to leave the chiefs in
-possession of their estates and control each of
-his own chiefery, all to be under the protection
-of the French flag. This, he said, they were
-willing to do, although the Queen had broken her
-written agreement with them, and by deserting
-her country and throne had absolved them from
-all obligations to her. Before the conclusion of
-the interview Ariitaimai had won the respect and
-admiration of the governor, and from that time
-on they worked together to bring about a
-peaceable settlement of the long and disastrous war.
-The journey which she was obliged to make in
-order to meet the chiefs in council was a long
-one, and while she was making her preparations
-the governor's own aid-de-camp arrived ready
-to accompany her, bringing the governor's
-horses and all necessary passports. She says in
-her memoirs: &quot;I knew that my influence with
-the natives would be sufficient to save us from
-any trouble with them.&quot; Arrived at last at the
-principal native fort where the chiefs were
-assembled, her first act showed her the accomplished
-diplomat. She sent a trusty messenger for
-Nuutere, the one whose influence against peace
-she most feared, and who with the other chief,
-Teaatoro, practically controlled the situation.
-When he came out to see her she took him by
-the hand and said: &quot;My object in coming here
-is to bring peace, and I have counted on you
-for the sake of old friendship to be my speaker
-in this trying instance.&quot; She quaintly adds:
-&quot;He was very much perplexed at this,&quot; evidently
-not understanding why she could not speak for
-herself as she had often done before. But to
-her surprise Ariitaimai found the old chief very
-much broken in spirit and quite ready to listen
-to her arguments for peace, and she soon had
-his promise to speak for the acceptance of the
-governor's proposition. Human nature is very
-much the same the world over, whether encased
-in a brown skin or white. Nuutere called
-Teaatoro to him, and, after a hasty consultation,
-came over and whispered to Ariitaimai that
-Teaatoro would be all right. This practically
-settled the matter, but as in all political
-assemblies the usual formalities must be gone through
-with and Nuutere called upon each one of the
-chiefs for his opinion. The speakers all teemed
-with love and admiration for my heroine and
-I can not refrain from making some quotations.
-Nuutere, after stating the object of the meeting,
-called upon Teaatoro to make the first speech.
-He said: &quot;We are all as one person in this
-meeting, and we have suffered together as
-brothers. We have heard what the object of
-this lone woman's visit amongst us is, solely
-for our good and that of our children. What can
-we say to this? We can only return her one
-answer, which is to thank her for the trouble
-and danger she has taken upon herself, for
-the peace she has brought, and she must return
-to the French commander with this our answer.
-We have been five months on the point of
-starvation. We lost a great many of our
-men at Tamavao. The best of our blood was
-spilled at Mahaena. At Piha-e-atata, our
-young men were slain. Our Queen left us in
-the midst of our troubles without the least
-sorrow for us. We have heard no more of the help
-which was promised us by Great Britain.&quot;
-Another chief rose and said: &quot;Ariitaimai, you have
-flown amongst us, as it were, like the two birds
-of Ruataa and Teena. You have brought the
-cooling medicine of vainu into the hearts of the
-chiefs. Our hearts yearn for you and we can
-not in words thank you; you have brought us
-the best of all goods, which is peace. You have
-done this when you thought we were in great
-trouble, and ran the risk of losing our lives and
-property. Your people will prove to you in the
-future that your visit will always remain in their
-memory.&quot; The old chief of her own district
-turned toward Ariitaimai and said only: &quot;As
-you are my head, my eyes, my hands and my
-feet, what more can I say? What you have
-decided we accept and will carry out.&quot; One
-dissenting voice only was heard, a young chief
-who had but lately come into his possessions and
-was anxious to distinguish himself as a warrior.
-He called out in a loud voice: &quot;Why have you
-decided upon this peace so soon? Tahiti is not
-broken asunder. We could play with the French
-until we could get aid of Great Britain, who has
-formally promised to help us through in this
-war. I think you have all done wrong.&quot; But
-the young man had his lesson to learn and it was
-promptly taught him by Ariitaimai's spokesman.
-The spirit of young America is not appreciated
-in Tahiti, where reverence for age and worship
-of the ancestors is a vital part of the native pagan
-religion. Nuutere turned on the young man
-and asked: &quot;Where were you, that consider
-yourself such a fighting man, in the fights which
-have already happened? I have never perceived
-you ahead of the others. You do not excel the
-youngest of our men in all of these battles.
-What are you known as in the annals of the
-country which allows you to get up and speak
-when your chiefs have already given the word?&quot;
-Ariitaimai set out immediately on her return
-trip, this time escorted by ten of the chiefs.
-Although they made all possible haste the time
-had already expired before they reached the
-governor's headquarters, and preparations were
-being made to attack one of the native forts, the
-officers having concluded that her errand had
-been a failure. The governor, seeing her at a
-distance, rode out to meet her and helped her
-from her horse. He asked her anxiously in
-Tahitian, &quot;Is it peace?&quot; and she replied that it
-was peace and that everything was all right with
-the chiefs. He held her hand as he said with
-great feeling: &quot;The Tahitians should never
-forget you; but your work is not finished. You
-must now go to Raiatea and bring us back the
-Queen.&quot; So Ariitaimai started on her second
-and more difficult errand. At first Queen Pomare
-refused to receive her, sending word that she
-was told that she had gone over to the French;
-but later she granted her an interview in which
-she cried very much, upbraiding her friend for
-the stand she had taken, and accusing her of
-betraying her interests to the French.</p>
-<p>The Queen then sent for the chiefs of her
-own family with whom she had taken refuge,
-and, after a prolonged conference, they advised
-her not to return. She said to Ariitaimai: &quot;I
-trust to the word of Great Britain, who has
-promised us to send ships and men to fight our
-cause and to keep us an independent state, and
-I will not return and be under the French.&quot; So
-after repeated pleading poor Ariitaimai was
-obliged to return to the governor with Pomare's
-answer. He was much disappointed but said as
-the chiefs of Tahiti had agreed to peace and as
-he had nothing to do with the chiefs of Raiatea
-they must decide on another monarch, and
-offered to make Ariitaimai queen of Tahiti in
-Pomare's place. But this the faithful friend
-would not listen to, and begged the governor to
-allow her again to see Pomare, as she believed
-that when she had had time to think the matter
-over she would change her mind. To this the
-governor very reluctantly consented, as he was
-entirely out of patience with Pomare, and would
-much have preferred to make Ariitaimai queen,
-which could have been done with great
-propriety, as she was at that time the head chiefess
-of the island. After a stormy trip she arrived
-again at Raiatea and this time was fortunate
-enough to find her friend Aimata alone, the
-chiefs having gone to an assembly to consult
-over the affairs of their own island. This time
-our faithful ambassadress did not hasten her
-visit. She renewed and strengthened the ties
-of friendship which had bound them together
-since their early girlhood, and she records in
-her memoirs that they had a beautiful visit
-together before any mention was made of the
-real object of her coming. The charming way
-in which she speaks in her memoirs of Pomare's
-flight shows the tenderness of her affection
-for her friend. She says, calling her by her
-girlhood name: &quot;The unfortunate Aimata had
-troubles of every sort, domestic, political,
-private and public, until at last the missionaries
-English and French, fought so violently for
-control of her and the island that she was fairly
-driven away.&quot; With all her acuteness and
-learning in other matters, she seems to have had no
-realization of the true character of the woman she
-so beautifully idealized. She still saw in the Queen
-the qualities she loved in the young girl, and
-her affection blinded her to the defects in her
-friend's character which entirely unfitted her for
-the position she occupied. Events do not move
-as rapidly in Tahiti as in America, and our young
-diplomat, having the governor's promise to await
-her return, took her own time. She remained
-with the Queen two months and had the
-satisfaction of returning home with her promise to
-sail for Tahiti as soon as her favorite schooner
-Ana could be made ready. But, before sailing,
-another idea took possession of the unreasonable
-woman and she sent word to the Tahitian chiefs
-that as the English had brought her to Raiatea
-she would return only in an English ship, and
-demanded that one be sent to fetch her.</p>
-<p>This unexpected and preposterous demand
-plunged poor Ariitaimai into the deepest grief.
-For the first time a note of complaint of her
-friend appears in her memoirs. The French
-governor laughed at the demands of Pomare and
-again offered the throne to Ariitaimai, and
-argued long to prove to her that it was her duty
-to accept it. Where in history is the woman who
-would not now have felt that she had exhausted
-all the demands of friendship, who would not
-by this time have been tempted by the dazzling
-prospect of a throne, upheld by a powerful
-governor who had become her devoted friend and
-admirer, to be surrounded by chiefs who had
-already accepted her leadership, and who, for
-years, had held her position among them as
-chief ess as a sacred trust? But no ambitious
-dreams disturbed the clear judgment of this
-simple-minded woman. She had set herself a
-task and her only ambition was to accomplish it.
-Not for one moment did the loyal woman waver
-in her devotion to her friend. She refused
-absolutely to entertain a thought of the queenship,
-and retired to her country home almost in
-despair. She says very simply in her memoirs:
-&quot;We then remained at home in great trouble
-and did not know what was to be done next.
-The governor on several occasions offered to
-make me the sovereign of the island in place of
-Pomare, which, however, I could not entertain.&quot;
-It is in this simple and childlike manner she
-describes all the events in this perplexing
-situation. Not by one word does she anywhere
-intimate that she is doing anything extraordinary
-or praiseworthy or more than her simple duty.</p>
-<p>She was not allowed to remain long inactive.
-Word came to her that the governor and chiefs
-were getting very restless and impatient at the
-unsettled state of the island politics and had
-decided not to negotiate further with the Pomares;
-and, moreover, that a document to this effect had
-been already drawn up and practically agreed
-upon. This roused her again to see the
-governor; and this time Fate put a powerful weapon
-in her hands. Just as she was leaving her home
-an old native preacher came along and secretly
-gave her a letter from her beloved Aimata. She
-wrote that she was sorry that she had not come
-back when she promised, that she was much
-distressed at the news from Tahiti, that she was
-an unhappy woman and, if not too late, she would
-surely come back if her faithful friend would
-come for her. Happy Ariitaimai fairly flew to
-the governor. What after all if it should be too
-late! She had never gone to the governor with
-so much fear and trepidation, and her fears were
-in no way lessened by his reception of her request
-that she be allowed to go once more to Raiatea
-and make a last effort to bring back the Queen.
-This request for the first time irritated the
-governor toward her. He said: &quot;Have you not done
-enough for the Pomares that you should
-continue to go down to fetch them?&quot; and he showed
-her the document which she had heard of but
-which was much worse than she supposed, as it
-proposed to break up the act of protectorate
-that had been already made and distinctly stated
-that as Ariitalmai had refused to be made queen
-he would make the island a French colony at
-once. But with that precious letter in her bosom
-she would not be thwarted in her purpose, and
-did not leave the governor until she had received
-his very grudging permission to see Pomare and,
-if she consented to return, to take her to Moorea
-and let him know. With this she was obliged
-to be contented. More she could not accomplish
-without divulging the secret of her letter, and
-this, she argued, would be disloyal to her friend;
-for was it not a secret letter sent to her at great
-risk? No, she would accomplish her purpose
-without humiliating her Queen. Pomare should
-return at the request of the governor without
-losing aught of her queenly dignity.</p>
-<p>And now this little drama draws rapidly to a
-close. Ariitaimai made her third trip to Raiatea
-and accompanied Pomare to Moorea, and sent
-word to the governor that he would find them
-there. Obedient to this gently expressed
-command of his ambassadress, the governor very
-courteously went to Moorea in person to receive
-the Queen and bring her back to her home and
-throne. In the same dispassionate style
-Ariitaimai tells of the homeward journey: &quot;As we all
-went on board a salute was fired. We sailed
-around the island, flying the protectorate flag at
-the fore, to inform the people of these islands
-that their Queen had returned. We then
-continued our route for Papeete and on arriving
-there the forts from the shore saluted the flag.&quot;
-But O! the irony of Fate! As they entered the
-harbor what a sight met the eyes of the poor
-Queen! Both British and American ships were
-anchored there, having come at last in answer
-to her appeals, but only in time to see her placed
-on her throne by the grace of the hated French,
-But peace had been bought too dearly to be
-broken now even by this vacillating queen, and
-the British and American officers, seeing the
-situation, had the good sense to assist in the
-general festivities celebrating the long-looked-for
-peace. The memoirs conclude with this simple
-statement: &quot;The Queen remained several hours
-on board the steamer as the governor wished the
-natives to see that the Queen had really come
-back. There were soldiers in line on shore to
-receive us and we were conducted to the
-governor's house. The peace of the island was then
-decided upon. On arriving at the governor's
-house we found all the commanders of the troops
-and vessels there and before them I was thanked
-by Governor Bruat for what I had done for my
-country.&quot;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>When a world of men</p>
-<p>Could not prevail with all their oratory</p>
-<p>Yet hath a woman's kindness overruled.</p>
-<p>SHAKESPEARE.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</div>
-</div>
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