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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As He Tore Wildly From Side To
Side, The Natives Dodged Under The Lasso, Slipping It Over Their
Heads, And Swung Themselves Over Their Saddles, Hanging In One
Stirrup, To Aid Their Trained Horses To Steady Themselves As The
Bullock Tugged Violently Against Them.
He was escorted thus for a
mile, his strength failing with each useless effort, his tongue
hanging out, blood
And foam dropping from his mouth and nostrils,
his flanks covered with foam and sweat, till blind and staggering,
he was led to a tree, where he was at once stabbed, and two hours
afterwards a part of him was served at table. The natives were
surprised that I avoided seeing his death, as the native women
greatly enjoy such a spectacle. This mode of killing an animal
while heated and terrified, doubtless accounts for the dark colour
and hardness of Hawaiian beef.
Numbers of the natives are expert with the lasso, and besides
capturing with it wild and half wild cattle, they catch horses with
it, and since I came here my host caught a sheep with it, singling
out the one he wished to kill, from the rest of the galloping flock
with an unerring aim. It takes a whole ox hide cut into strips to
make a good lasso.
One of my native friends tells me that a native man who attended on
me in one of my earlier expeditions has since been "prayed to
death." One often hears this phrase, and it appears that the
superstition which it represents has by no means died out. There
are persons who are believed to have the lives of others in their
hands, and their services are procured by offerings of white fowls,
brown hogs, and awa, as well as money, by any one who has a grudge
against another. Several other instances have been told me of
persons who have actually died under the influence of the terror and
despair produced by being told that the kahuna was "praying them to
death." I cannot learn whether these over-efficacious prayers are
supposed to be addressed to the true God, or to the ancient Hawaiian
divinities. The natives are very superstitious, and the late king,
who was both educated and intelligent, was much under the dominion
of a sorceress.
I have made the ascent of Hualalai twice from here, the first time
guided by my host and hostess, and the second time rather
adventurously alone. Forests of koa, sandal-wood, and ohia, with an
undergrowth of raspberries and ferns clothe its base, the fragrant
maile, and the graceful sarsaparilla vine, with its clustered coral-
coloured buds, nearly smother many of the trees, and in several
places the heavy ie forms the semblance of triumphal arches over the
track. This forest terminates abruptly on the great volcanic
wilderness, with its starved growth of unsightly scrub. But
Hualalai, though 10,000 feet in height, is covered with Pteris
aquilina, mamane, coarse bunch grass, and pukeave to its very
summit, which is crowned by a small, solitary, blossoming ohia.
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