The Hawaiian Archipelago - Six Months Among The Palm Groves, Coral Reefs, And Volcanoes Of The Sandwich Islands By Isabella L. Bird
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Some Had Red
Shirts And Blue Trousers, Others Considered That A Shirt Was An
Effective Outer Garment.
Some wore highly ornamental, dandified
shirts, and trousers tucked into high, rusty, mud-covered boots.
A
few young men were in white straw hats, white shirts, and white
trousers, with crimson leis round their hats and throats. Some had
diggers' scarves round their waists; but the most effective costume
was sported by a few old men, who had tied crash towels over their
shoulders.
It was often amusing and pathetic at once to see them come up.
Obviously, when the critical moment arrived, they were as anxious to
do the right thing as a debutante is to back her train successfully
out of the royal presence at St. James's. Some were so agitated at
last as to require much coaching from the governor as to how to
present their gifts and shake hands. Some half dropped down on
their knees, others passionately and with tears kissed the king's
hand, or grasped it convulsively in both their own; while a few were
so embarrassed by the presents they were carrying that they had no
hands at all to shake, and the sovereign good-naturedly clapped them
on the shoulders. Some of them, in shaking hands, adroitly slipped
coins into the king's palm, so as to make sure that he received
their loving tribute. There had been a hui, or native meeting,
which had passed resolutions, afterwards presented to Lunalilo,
setting forth that whereas he received a great deal of money in
revenue from the haoles, they, his native people, would feel that he
did not love them if he would not receive from their own hands
contributions in silver for his support. So, in order not to wound
their feelings, he accepted these rather troublesome cash donations.
One woman, sorely afflicted with quaking palsy, dragged herself
slowly along. One hand hung by her side helpless, and the other
grasped a live fowl so tightly that she could not loosen it to shake
hands, whereupon the king raised the helpless arm, which called
forth much cheering. There was one poor cripple who had only the
use of his arms. His knees were doubled under him, and he trailed
his body along the ground. He had dragged himself two miles "to lie
for a moment at the king's feet," and even his poor arms carried a
gift. He looked hardly like a human shape, as his desire was
realised; and, I doubt not, would have been content then and there
to die. There were ancient men, tattooed all over, who had passed
their first youth when the idols were cast away, and who remembered
the old days of tyranny when it was an offence, punishable with
death, for a man to let his shadow fall on the king; and when none
of "the swinish multitude" had any rights which they could sustain
against their chiefs. These came up bewildered, trembling, almost
falling on their knees, hardly daring to raise their eyes to the
king's kind, encouraging face, and bathed his hand with tears while
they kissed it.
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