[Northern California, Oregon, and the Sandwich Islands by Charles Nordhoff]@TWC D-Link book
Northern California, Oregon, and the Sandwich Islands

CHAPTER XIII
82/114

It was reduced to metre, and sung by the ancients.

It is passing away in our day, and in a few years no trace of it will remain.
Whether the prediction was made or not, the fact is that Puna has been ravaged by volcanic action.
LEGEND OF THE CHIEF HUA.
The high chief Hua, being in Maui, said to Uluhoomoe, his kahuna, that he wished for some _uau_ from the mountains (a large bird peculiar to the island of Hawaii).

Uluhoomoe replied that there were no uau in the mountains--that all the birds had gone to the sea.

Hua, getting angry, said to his priest: "If I send my men to the mountains, and they find any uau there, I will put you to death." After this menace, the chief ordered his servants to go to bird-hunting.
They obeyed; but instead of going to the mountains (_mauka_), they set snares on the shores (_makai_), and captured many birds of different kinds, among others the uau and ulili.

Returning to the palace, they assured the chief that they had hunted in the mountains.
Hua summoned his kahuna, and said to him: "There are the birds from the mountains; you are to die." Uluhoomoe smelled of the birds, and replied: "These birds do not come from the mountains; they have an odor of the sea." Hua, supported by his attendants, persisted in saying, as he believed truly, that they came from the mountains, and repeated his sentence: "You are to die." Uluhoomoe responded: "I shall have a witness in my favor if you let me open these birds in your presence." The chief consented, and small fish were found in the crops of the birds.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books