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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The Only Dwellings Within The Heiau Were Those Of The Priests, And
The "Sacred House" Of The King, In Which He Resided During The
Seasons Of Strict Tabu.
A doleful place this heiau is, haunted not
only by the memories of almost unimaginable terrors, but by the
Sore
thought that generations of Hawaiians lived and died in the
unutterable darkness of this ignorant worship, passing in long
procession from these grim rites into the presence of the Father
whose infinite compassions they had never known.
Every hundred feet of ascent from the rainless, fervid beach of
Kawaihae increased the freshness of the temperature, and rendered
exercise more delightful. From the fringe of palms along the coast
to the damp hills north of Waimea, a distance of ten miles, there is
not a tree or stream, though the scorched earth is deeply scored by
the rush of fierce temporary torrents. Hitherto, I have only
travelled over the green coast which faces the trade winds, where
clouds gather and shed their rains, and this desert, which occupies
a great part of leeward Hawaii, displeases me. It lies burning in
the fierce splendours of a zone, which, until now, I had forgotten
was the torrid zone, unwatered and unfruitful, red and desolate
under the sun. The island is here only twenty-two miles wide, and
strong winds sweep across it, whirling up its surface in great brown
clouds, so that the uplands in part appear a smoking plain, backed
by naked volcanic cones. No water, no grass, no ferns. Some
thornless thistles, a little brush of sapless-looking indigo, and
some species of compositae struggle for a doleful existence. There
is nothing tropical about it but the intense heat. The red soil
becomes suffused with a green tinge ten miles from the beach, and at
the summit of the ascent the desert blends with this beautiful
Waimea plain, one of the most marked features of Hawaii. The air
became damp and cool; miles of fine smooth green grass stretched out
before us; high hills, broken, pinnacled, wooded, and cleft with
deep ravines, rose on our left; we heard the clash and music of
falling water: to the north it was like the Munster Thal, to the
south altogether volcanic. The tropics had vanished. There were
frame houses sheltered from the winds by artificial screens of
mulberry trees, and from the incursions of cattle by rough walls of
lava stones five feet high; a mission and court house, a native
church, much too large for the shrunken population, and other
indications of an inhabited region. Except for the woods which
clothe the hills, the characteristic of the scenery is baldness.
On clambering over the wall which surrounds my host's kraal of
dwellings, I heard in the dusk strange sweet voices crying rudely
and emphatically, "Who are you? What do you want?" and was relieved
to find that the somewhat inhospitable interrogation only proceeded
from two Australian magpies. Mr. S - - is a Tasmanian, married to a
young half-white lady: and her native mother and seven or eight
dark girls are here, besides a number of natives and Chinese, and
half Chinese, who are employed about the place. Sheep are the
source of my host's wealth. He has 25,000 at three stations on
Mauna Kea, and, at an altitude of 6000 feet they flourish, and are
free from some of the maladies to which they are liable elsewhere.
Though there are only three or four sheep owners on the islands,
they exported 288,526 lbs. of wool last year. {223} Mr. S - - has
also 1000 head of cattle and 50 horses.
The industry of Waimea is cattle raising, and some feeble attempts
are being made to improve the degenerate island breed by the
importation of a few short-horn cows from New Zealand. These plains
afford magnificent pasturage as well as galloping ground. They are
a very great thoroughfare. The island, which is an equilateral
triangle, about 300 miles in "circuit," can only be crossed here.
Elsewhere, an impenetrable forest belt, and an impassable volcanic
wilderness, compel travellers to take the burning track of adamant
which snakes round the southern coast, when they are minded to go
from one side of Hawaii to the other. Waimea also has the singular
distinction of a road from the beach, which is traversed on great
occasions by two or three oxen and mule teams, and very rarely by a
more ambitious conveyance. There are few hours of day or night in
which the tremulous thud of shoeless horses galloping on grass is
not heard in Waimea.
The altitude of this great table-land is 2500 feet, and the air is
never too hot, the temperature averaging 64 degrees Fahrenheit.
There is mist or rain on most days of the year for a short time, and
the mornings and evenings are clear and cool. The long sweeping
curves of the three great Hawaiian mountains spring from this level.
The huge bulk of Mauna Kea without shoulders or spurs, rises
directly from the Waimea level on the south to the altitude of
14,000 feet, and his base is thickly clustered with tufa-cones of a
bright red colour, from 300 to 1000 feet in height. Considerably
further back, indeed forty miles away, the smooth dome of Mauna Loa
appears very serene now, but only thirteen years ago the light was
so brilliant, from one of its tremendous eruptions, that here it was
possible to read a newspaper by it, and during its height candles
were unnecessary in the evenings! Nearer the coast, and about
thirty miles from here, is the less conspicuous dome of the dead
volcano of Hualalai. If all Hawaii, south of Waimea, were submerged
to a depth of 8000 feet, three nearly equi-distant, dome-shaped
volcanic islands would remain, the highest of which would have an
altitude of 6000 feet. To the south of these plains violent
volcanic action is everywhere apparent, not only in tufa cones, but
in tracts of ashes, scoriae, and volcanic sand.
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