accompanied by swayings of the body and
occasional choral
interruptions, all becoming more and more excited as the
story or song approached its natural
climax. Sometimes this
was
varied by a
solitarydancer starting from the
circle, and
performing the wildest bacchanalian antics, to the vocal
incitement of the rest. This only ended with physical
exhaustion, or
collapse from
feminine hysteria.
The food was excellent; the stuffed puppy was a dish for an
epicure. Though
knives and forks were unknown, and each
helped herself from the plantain leaf, one had not the least
objection to do
likewise, for the most scrupulous cleanliness
is one of the many merits of these
fascinating creatures.
Before every dip into the leaf, the
dainty little fingers
were plunged into bowls of fresh water provided for the
purpose. Delicious fruit followed the
substantial fare; a
small glass of KAVA - a juice extracted from a root of the
pepper tribe - was then served to all alike. Having watched
the process of preparing the
beverage, I am
unable to speak
as to its flavour. The making of it is
remarkable. A number
of women sit on the ground, chew the root, and spit its juice
into a bowl. The
liquor is kept till it ferments, after
which it becomes highly intoxicating. I regret to say that
its potency was soon manifested on this occasion. No sooner
did the
poison set their wild blood tingling, than a free
fight began for the remaining gourds. Such a scratching,
pulling of hair, clawing, kicking, and crying, were never
seen. Only by main force did we succeed in restoring peace.
It is but fair to state that, except on the
celebration of
one or two
solemn and
sacred rites such as that of the
LOOHOU, these island Thyades never touch fermented
liquors.
CHAPTER XXXI
IT was an easier task when all was over to set the little
Amazons on their horses than to keep them there, for by the
time we had perched one on her
saddle, or pad rather, and
adjusted her with the greatest nicety, another whom we had
just left would lose her balance and fall with a
scream to
the ground. It was almost as difficult as packing mules on
the
prairie. For my part it must be confessed that I left
the
completion of the job to others. Curious and
entertaining as the feast was, my whole attention was centred
and absorbed in Arakeeta, which that artful little
enchantress had the gift to know, and lashed me accordingly
with her eyes more
cruelly than she had done with her whip.
I had got so far, you see, as to learn her name, the first
instalment of an
intimacy which my demolished heart was
staked on perfecting. I noticed that she refused the KAVA
with real or
affected repugnance; and when the passage of
arms, and legs, began, she slipped away, caught her animal,
and with a
parting laugh at me, started off for home. There
was not the faintest shadow of
encouragement in her saucy
looks to follow her. Still, she was a year older than
Juliet, who was nearly fourteen; so, who could say what those
looks might veil? Besides:
Das Naturell der Frauen
Ist so nah mit Kunst verwandt,
that one might easily be
mistaken. Anyhow,
flight provoked
pursuit; I jumped on to my horse, and raced along the plain
like mad. She saw me coming, and flogged the more, but being
the better mounted of the two, by degrees I overhauled her.
As I ranged
alongside, neither slackened speed; and reaching
out to catch her
bridle, my knee
hooked under the hollow of
hers, twisted her clean off her pad, and in a moment she lay
senseless on the ground. I flung myself from my horse, and
laid her head upon my lap. Good God! had I broken her neck!
She did not stir; her eyes were closed, but she breathed, and
her heart beat quickly. I was wild with
terror and remorse.
I looked back for aid, but the others had not started; we
were still a mile or more from Honolulu. I knew not what to
do. I kissed her
forehead, I called her by her name. But
she lay like a child asleep. Presently her dazed eyes opened
and stared with wonderment, and then she smiled. The tears,
I think, were on my cheeks, and
seeing them, she put her arms
around my neck and - forgave me.
She had fallen on her head and had been stunned. I caught
the horses while she sat still, and we walked them slowly
home. When we got within sight of her hut on the outskirts
of the town, she would not let me go further. There was
sadness in her look when we parted. I made her understand (I
had picked up two or three words) that I would return to see
her. She at once shook her head with an expression of
something akin to fear. I too felt
sorrowful, and worse than
sorrowful, jealous.
When the night fell I sought her hut. It was one of the
better kind, built like others
mainly with matting; no doors
or windows, but with an
extensive verandah which protected
the inner part from rain and sun. Now and again I caught
glimpses of Arakeeta's fairy form flitting in, or obscuring,
the lamplight. I could see two other women and two men. Who
and what were they? Was one of those dark forms an Othello,
ready to
smother his Desdemona? Or were either of them a
Valentine between my Marguerite and me? Though there was no
moon, I dared not
venture within the lamp's rays, for her
sake; for my own, I was
reckless now - I would have thanked
either of them to brain me with his hoe. But Arakeeta came
not.
In the day-time I roamed about the district, about the TARO
fields, in case she might be
working there. Every evening
before
sundown, many of the women and some of the well-to-do
men, and a few whites, used to ride on the plain that
stretches along the shore between the
fringe of palm groves
and the mountain spurs. I had seen Arakeeta
amongst them
before the LOOHOU feast. She had given this up now, and why?
Night after night I hovered about the hut. When she was in
the verandah I whispered her name. She started and peered
into the dark, hesitated, then fled. Again the same thing
happened. She had heard me, she knew that I was there, but
she came not; no, wiser than I, she came not. And though I
sighed:
What is worth
The rest of Heaven, the rest of earth?
the
shrewd little wench
doubtless told herself: 'A quiet
life, without the fear of the broomstick.'
Fred was
impatient to be off, I had already trespassed too
long on the kind
hospitality of General Miller, neither of us
had heard from England for more than a year, and the
opportunities of trading vessels to California seldom
offered. A rare chance came - a fast-sailing brig, the
'Corsair,' was to leave in a few days for San Francisco. The
captain was an Englishman, and had the
repute of being a boon
companion and a good caterer. We - I, passively - settled to
go. Samson
decided to remain. He wanted to visit Owyhee.
He came on board with us, however; and, with a
parting bumper
of
champagne, we said 'Good-bye.' That was the last I ever
saw of him. The hardships had broken him down. He died not
long after.
The light
breeze carried us slowly away - for the first time
for many long months with our faces to the east. But it was
not 'merry' England that filled my
juvenile fancies. I
leaned upon the taffrail and watched this lovely land of the
'flowery food' fade slowly from my sight. I had eaten of the
Lotus, and knew no wish but to
linger on, to roam no more, to