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 You Know, The Islands Cast Off Idolatry In 1819, But It Was Not
Till 1835 That Mr. And Mrs. Coan Arrived In Hilo, Where Mr. And Mrs.
Lyman Had Been Toiling For Some Time, And Had Produced A Marked
Change On The Social Condition Of The People.
Mr. C. was a fervid
speaker, and physically very robust, and when he had mastered the
language, he undertook much of the travelling and touring, and Mr.
Lyman took charge of the home mission station, and the boarding and
industrial school which he still indefatigably superintends.
There
were 15,000 natives then in the district, and its extremes were 100
miles apart. Portions of it could only be reached with peril to
limbs and even life. Horses were only regarded as wild animals in
those days, and Mr. C. traversed on foot the district I have just
returned from, not lazily riding down the gulch sides, but climbing,
or being let down by ropes from tree to tree, and from crag to crag.
In times of rain like last week, when it was impossible to ford the
rivers, he sometimes swam across, with a rope to prevent him from
being carried away, through others he rode on the broad shoulders of
a willing native, while a company of strong men locked hands and
stretched themselves across the torrent, between him and the
cataract, to prevent him from being carried over in case his bearer
should fall. This experience was often repeated three or four times
a day. His smallest weekly number of sermons was six or seven, and
the largest from twenty-five to thirty. He often travelled in
drowning rain, crossed dangerous streams, climbed slippery
precipices, and frequently preached in wind and rain with all his
garments saturated. On every occasion he received aid from the
natives, who were so kind and friendly, that when he used to sleep
in the woods at night, he hung his watch on a tree, knowing that it
was perfectly safe from pilfering or curious touch. Indeed the
Christian teachers seem to have been regarded as tabu.
Before the end of that year, Mr. Coan had made the circuit of
Hawaii, a foot and canoe trip of 300 miles, in which he nearly
suffered canoe-wreck twice. In all, he has admitted into the
Christian church by baptism, 12,000 persons, besides 4000 infants.
He gave a most interesting account of one great baptism. The
greatest care was previously taken in selecting, teaching, watching,
and examining the candidates. Those from the distant villages came
and spent several months here for preliminary instruction. Many of
these were converts of two years' standing, a larger class had been
on the list for more than a year, and a smaller one for a lesser
period. The accepted candidates were announced by name several
weeks previously, and friends and enemies everywhere were called
upon to testify all that they knew about them. On the first Sunday
in July, 1838, 1705 persons, formerly heathens, were baptised.
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