[Typee by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link bookTypee CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE 14/15
Previous to the Feast of Calabashes I had been puzzled what particular station to assign to Mehevi.
But the important part he took upon that occasion convinced me that he had no superior among the inhabitants of the valley.
I had invariably noticed a certain degree of deference paid to him by all with whom I had ever seen him brought in contact; but when I remembered that my wanderings had been confined to a limited portion of the valley, and that towards the sea a number of distinguished chiefs resided, some of whom had separately visited me at Marheyo's house, and whom, until the Festival, I had never seen in the company of Mehevi, I felt disposed to believe that his rank after all might not be particularly elevated. The revels, however, had brought together all the warriors whom I had seen individually and in groups at different times and places.
Among them Mehevi moved with an easy air of superiority which was not to be mistaken; and he whom I had only looked at as the hospitable host of the Ti, and one of the military leaders of the tribe, now assumed in my eyes the dignity of royal station.
His striking costume, no less than his naturally commanding figure, seemed indeed to give him pre-eminence over the rest.
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