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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There Are Two Apartments, A Loft And A
"Lean-To." The Hospitable Owners Gave Me Their Sleeping-Room, Which
Was Divided From The "Living-Room" By A Canvass Partition.
This
last has a rude stone chimney split by an earthquake, holding fire
enough to roast an ox.
Round it the floor is paved with great rough
stones. A fire of logs, fully three feet high, was burning, but
there was a faulty draught, and it emitted a stinging smoke. I
looked for something to sit upon, but there was nothing but a high
bench, or chopping-block, and a fixed seat in the corner of the
wall. The rest of the furniture consisted of a small table, some
pots, a frying-pan, a tin dish and plates, a dipper, and some tin
pannikins. Four or five rifles and "shot-guns," and a piece of raw
meat, were hanging against the wall. A tin bowl was brought to me
for washing, which served the same purpose for every one. The oil
was exhausted, so recourse was had to the native expedient of a jar
of beef fat with a wick in it.
We were most hospitably received, but the native wife, as is usually
the case, was too shy to eat with us or even to appear at all. Our
host is a superb young man, very frank and prepossessing looking, a
thorough mountaineer, most expert with the lasso and in hunting wild
cattle. The "station" consists of a wool shed, a low grass hut, a
hut with one side gone, a bell-tent, and the more substantial cabin
in which we are lodged.
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