[Omoo: Adventures in the South Seas by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link bookOmoo: Adventures in the South Seas CHAPTER LXV 2/7
They gave us a cordial reception, and a hearty supper; and we sat up talking until a late hour. We now prepared to go round to Taloo, a place from which we were not far off when at Tamai; but wishing to see as much of the island as we could, we preferred returning to Martair, and then going round by way of the beach. Taloo, the only frequented harbour of Imeeo, lies on the western side of the island, almost directly over against Martair.
Upon one shore of the bay stands the village of Partoowye, a missionary station.
In its vicinity is an extensive sugar plantation--the best in the South Seas, perhaps--worked by a person from Sydney. The patrimonial property of the husband of Pomaree, and every way a delightful retreat, Partoowye was one of the occasional residences of the court.
But at the time I write of it was permanently fixed there, the queen having fled thither from Tahiti. Partoowye, they told us, was by no means the place Papeetee was.
Ships seldom touched, and very few foreigners were living ashore.
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