FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69  
70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   >>   >|  
he first Christian missionaries landed in 1819. Now the island is ruled by the United States of America.] [Footnote 27: Pa-h[=o]-e-h[=o]-e.] [Footnote 28: Kah-pee-[=o]-l[)a]-nee. She was high female chief, in her own right, of a large district.] [Footnote 29: Kil-a-wee-[)a]. The greatest active volcano in the world.] [Footnote 30: Chay-lo.] CHAPTER IX THE CANOE OF ADVENTURE _Elikana_ (Date of Incident, 1861) "I know not where His islands lift Their fronded palms in air; I only know I cannot drift Beyond His love and care." I Manihiki Island looked like a tiny anchored canoe far away across the Pacific, as Elikana glanced back from his place at the tiller. He sang, meantime, quietly to himself an air that still rang in his ears, the tune that he and his brother islanders had sung in praise of the Power and Providence of God at the services on Manihiki. For the Christian people of the Penrhyn group of South Sea Islands had come together in April, 1861, for their yearly meeting, paddling from the different quarters in their canoes through the white surge of the breakers that thunder day and night round the island. Elikana looked ahead to where his own island of Rakahanga grew clearer every moment on the sky-line ahead of them, though each time his craft dropped into the trough of the sea between the green curves of the league-long ocean rollers the island was lost from sight. He and his six companions were sailing back over the thirty miles between Manihiki and Rakahanga, two of the many little lonely ocean islands that stud the Pacific like stars. They sailed a strange craft, for it cannot be called raft or canoe or hut. It was all these and yet was neither. Two canoes, forty-eight feet long, sailed side by side. Between the canoes were spars, stretching across from one to the other, lashed to each boat and making a platform between them six feet wide. On this was built a hut, roofed with the beautiful braided leaves of the cocoa-nut palm. Overhead stretched the infinite sky. Underneath lay thousands of fathoms of blue-green ocean, whose cold, hidden deeps among the mountains and valleys of the awful ocean under-world held strange goblin fish-shapes. And on the surface this hut of leaves and bamboo swung dizzily between sky and ocean on the frail canoes. And in the canoes and the hut were six brown Rakahangan men, two women, and a chubby, dark-eyed child, who sa
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69  
70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
canoes
 

Footnote

 
island
 

Elikana

 
Manihiki
 
Pacific
 
looked
 

islands

 

Rakahanga

 

strange


sailed

 

leaves

 

Christian

 

called

 

stretching

 

lashed

 

Between

 

landed

 

missionaries

 

States


companions

 

rollers

 

America

 

curves

 
league
 
United
 

sailing

 

lonely

 

thirty

 

shapes


surface

 
bamboo
 
goblin
 

mountains

 

valleys

 

dizzily

 

chubby

 

Rakahangan

 

braided

 
beautiful

roofed
 
platform
 

Overhead

 

hidden

 
fathoms
 

thousands

 

stretched

 

infinite

 

Underneath

 
making