<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER EIGHTEEN </h2>
<p>SWIMMING IN COMPANY WITH THE GIRLS OF THE VALLEY—A CANOE—EFFECTS
OF THE TABOO—A PLEASURE EXCURSION ON THE POND—BEAUTIFUL FREAK
OF FAYAWAY—MANTUA-MAKING—A STRANGER ARRIVES IN THE VALLEY—HIS
MYSTERIOUS CONDUCT—NATIVE ORATORY—THE INTERVIEW—ITS
RESULTS—DEPARTURE OF THE STRANGER</p>
<p>RETURNING health and peace of mind gave a new interest to everything
around me. I sought to diversify my time by as many enjoyments as lay
within my reach. Bathing in company with troops of girls formed one of my
chief amusements. We sometimes enjoyed the recreation in the waters of a
miniature lake, to which the central stream of the valley expanded. This
lovely sheet of water was almost circular in figure, and about three
hundred yards across. Its beauty was indescribable. All around its banks
waved luxuriant masses of tropical foliage, soaring high above which were
seen, here and there, the symmetrical shaft of the cocoanut tree,
surmounted by its tufts of graceful branches, drooping in the air like so
many waving ostrich plumes.</p>
<p>The ease and grace with which the maidens of the valley propelled
themselves through the water, and their familiarity with the element, were
truly astonishing. Sometimes they might be seen gliding along just under
the surface, without apparently moving hand or foot—then throwing
themselves on their sides, they darted through the water, revealing
glimpses of their forms, as, in the course of their rapid progress, they
shot for an instant partly into the air—at one moment they dived
deep down into the water, and the next they rose bounding to the surface.</p>
<p>I remember upon one occasion plunging in among a parcel of these
river-nymphs, and counting vainly on my superior strength, sought to drag
some of them under the water, but I quickly repented my temerity. The
amphibious young creatures swarmed about me like a shoal of dolphins, and
seizing hold of my devoted limbs, tumbled me about and ducked me under the
surface, until from the strange noises which rang in my ears, and the
supernatural visions dancing before my eyes, I thought I was in the land
of the spirits. I stood indeed as little chance among them as a cumbrous
whale attacked on all sides by a legion of swordfish. When at length they
relinquished their hold of me, they swam away in every direction, laughing
at my clumsy endeavours to reach them.</p>
<p>There was no boat on the lake; but at my solicitation and for my special
use, some of the young men attached to Marheyo's household, under the
direction of the indefatigable Kory-Kory, brought up a light and
tastefully carved canoe from the sea. It was launched upon the sheet of
water, and floated there as gracefully as a swan. But, melancholy to
relate, it produced an effect I had not anticipated. The sweet nymphs, who
had sported with me before on the lake, now all fled its vicinity. The
prohibited craft, guarded by the edicts of the 'taboo,' extended the
prohibition to the waters in which it lay.</p>
<p>For a few days, Kory-Kory, with one or two other youths, accompanied me in
my excursions to the lake, and while I paddled about in my light canoe,
would swim after me shouting and gambolling in pursuit. But I as ever
partial to what is termed in the 'Young Men's Own Book'—'the society
of virtuous and intelligent young ladies;' and in the absence of the
mermaids, the amusement became dull and insipid. One morning I expressed
to my faithful servitor my desire for the return of the nymphs. The honest
fellow looked at me bewildered for a moment, and then shook his head
solemnly, and murmured 'taboo! taboo!' giving me to understand that unless
the canoe was removed I could not expect to have the young ladies back
again. But to this procedure I was averse; I not only wanted the canoe to
stay where it was, but I wanted the beauteous Fayaway to get into it, and
paddle with me about the lake. This latter proposition completely
horrified Kory-Kory's notions of propriety. He inveighed against it, as
something too monstrous to be thought of. It not only shocked their
established notions of propriety, but was at variance with all their
religious ordinances.</p>
<p>However, although the 'taboo' was a ticklish thing to meddle with, I
determined to test its capabilities of resisting an attack. I consulted
the chief Mehevi, who endeavoured to dissuade me from my object; but I was
not to be repulsed; and accordingly increased the warmth of my
solicitations. At last he entered into a long, and I have no doubt a very
learned and eloquent exposition of the history and nature of the 'taboo'
as affecting this particular case; employing a variety of most
extraordinary words, which, from their amazing length and sonorousness, I
have every reason to believe were of a theological nature. But all that he
said failed to convince me: partly, perhaps, because I could not
comprehend a word that he uttered; but chiefly, that for the life of me I
could not understand why a woman would not have as much right to enter a
canoe as a man. At last he became a little more rational, and intimated
that, out of the abundant love he bore me, he would consult with the
priests and see what could be done.</p>
<p>How it was that the priesthood of Typee satisfied the affair with their
consciences, I know not; but so it was, and Fayaway dispensation from this
portion of the taboo was at length procured. Such an event I believe never
before had occurred in the valley; but it was high time the islanders
should be taught a little gallantry, and I trust that the example I set
them may produce beneficial effects. Ridiculous, indeed, that the lovely
creatures should be obliged to paddle about in the water, like so many
ducks, while a parcel of great strapping fellows skimmed over its surface
in their canoes.</p>
<p>The first day after Fayaway's emancipation, I had a delightful little
party on the lake—the damsels' Kory-Kory, and myself. My zealous
body-servant brought from the house a calabash of poee-poee, half a dozen
young cocoanuts—stripped of their husks—three pipes, as many
yams, and me on his back a part of the way. Something of a load; but
Kory-Kory was a very strong man for his size, and by no means brittle in
the spine. We had a very pleasant day; my trusty valet plied the paddle
and swept us gently along the margin of the water, beneath the shades of
the overhanging thickets. Fayaway and I reclined in the stern of the
canoe, on the very best terms possible with one another; the gentle nymph
occasionally placing her pipe to her lip, and exhaling the mild fumes of
the tobacco, to which her rosy breath added a fresh perfume. Strange as it
may seem, there is nothing in which a young and beautiful female appears
to more advantage than in the act of smoking. How captivating is a
Peruvian lady, swinging in her gaily-woven hammock of grass, extended
between two orange-trees, and inhaling the fragrance of a choice cigarro!</p>
<p>But Fayaway, holding in her delicately formed olive hand the long yellow
reed of her pipe, with its quaintly carved bowl, and every few moments
languishingly giving forth light wreaths of vapour from her mouth and
nostrils, looked still more engaging.</p>
<p>We floated about thus for several hours, when I looked up to the warm,
glowing, tropical sky, and then down into the transparent depths below;
and when my eye, wandering from the bewitching scenery around, fell upon
the grotesquely-tattooed form of Kory-Kory, and finally, encountered the
pensive gaze of Fayaway, I thought I had been transported to some fairy
region, so unreal did everything appear.</p>
<p>This lovely piece of water was the coolest spot in all the valley, and I
now made it a place of continual resort during the hottest period of the
day. One side of it lay near the termination of a long gradually expanding
gorge, which mounted to the heights that environed the vale. The strong
trade wind, met in its course by these elevations, circled and eddied
about their summits, and was sometimes driven down the steep ravine and
swept across the valley, ruffling in its passage the otherwise tranquil
surface of the lake.</p>
<p>One day, after we had been paddling about for some time, I disembarked
Kory-Kory, and paddled the canoe to the windward side of the lake. As I
turned the canoe, Fayaway, who was with me, seemed all at once to be
struck with some happy idea. With a wild exclamation of delight, she
disengaged from her person the ample robe of tappa which was knotted over
her shoulder (for the purpose of shielding her from the sun), and
spreading it out like a sail, stood erect with upraised arms in the head
of the canoe. We American sailors pride ourselves upon our straight, clean
spars, but a prettier little mast than Fayaway made was never shipped
aboard of any craft.</p>
<p>In a moment the tappa was distended by the breeze—the long brown
tresses of Fayaway streamed in the air—and the canoe glided rapidly
through the water, and shot towards the shore. Seated in the stern, I
directed its course with my paddle until it dashed up the soft sloping
bank, and Fayaway, with a light spring alighted on the ground; whilst
Kory-Kory, who had watched our manoeuvres with admiration, now clapped his
hands in transport, and shouted like a madman. Many a time afterwards was
this feat repeated.</p>
<p>If the reader has not observed ere this that I was the declared admirer of
Miss Fayaway, all I can say is that he is little conversant with affairs
of the heart, and I certainly shall not trouble myself to enlighten him
any farther. Out of the calico I had brought from the ship I made a dress
for this lovely girl. In it she looked, I must confess, something like an
opera-dancer.</p>
<p>The drapery of the latter damsel generally commences a little above the
elbows, but my island beauty's began at the waist, and terminated
sufficiently far above the ground to reveal the most bewitching ankle in
the universe.</p>
<p>The day that Fayaway first wore this robe was rendered memorable by a new
acquaintance being introduced to me. In the afternoon I was lying in the
house when I heard a great uproar outside; but being by this time pretty
well accustomed to the wild halloos which were almost continually ringing
through the valley, I paid little attention to it, until old Marheyo,
under the influence of some strange excitement, rushed into my presence
and communicated the astounding tidings, 'Marnoo pemi!' which being
interpreted, implied that an individual by the name of Marnoo was
approaching.</p>
<p>My worthy old friend evidently expected that this intelligence would
produce a great effect upon me, and for a time he stood earnestly
regarding me, as if curious to see how I should conduct myself, but as I
remained perfectly unmoved, the old gentleman darted out of the house
again, in as great a hurry as he had entered it.</p>
<p>'Marnoo, Marnoo,' cogitated I, 'I have never heard that name before. Some
distinguished character, I presume, from the prodigious riot the natives
are making;' the tumultuous noise drawing nearer and nearer every moment,
while 'Marnoo!—Marnoo!' was shouted by every tongue.</p>
<p>I made up my mind that some savage warrior of consequence, who had not yet
enjoyed the honour of an audience, was desirous of paying his respects on
the present occasion. So vain had I become by the lavish attention to
which I had been accustomed, that I felt half inclined, as a punishment
for such neglect, to give this Marnoo a cold reception, when the excited
throng came within view, convoying one of the most striking specimens of
humanity that I ever beheld.</p>
<p>The stranger could not have been more than twenty-five years of age, and
was a little above the ordinary height; had he a single hair's breadth
taller, the matchless symmetry of his form would have been destroyed. His
unclad limbs were beautifully formed; whilst the elegant outline of his
figure, together with his beardless cheeks, might have entitled him to the
distinction of standing for the statue of the Polynesian Apollo; and
indeed the oval of his countenance and the regularity of every feature
reminded one of an antique bust. But the marble repose of art was supplied
by a warmth and liveliness of expression only to be seen in the South Sea
Islander under the most favourable developments of nature. The hair of
Marnoo was a rich curling brown, and twined about his temples and neck in
little close curling ringlets, which danced up and down continually, when
he was animated in conversation. His cheek was of a feminine softness, and
his face was free from the least blemish of tattooing, although the rest
of his body was drawn all over with fanciful figures, which—unlike
the unconnected sketching usual among these natives—appeared to have
been executed in conformity with some general design.</p>
<p>The tattooing on his back in particular attracted my attention. The artist
employed must indeed have excelled in his profession. Traced along the
course of the spine was accurately delineated the slender, tapering and
diamond checkered shaft of the beautiful 'artu' tree. Branching from the
stem on each side, and disposed alternately, were the graceful branches
drooping with leaves all correctly drawn and elaborately finished. Indeed
the best specimen of the Fine Arts I had yet seen in Typee. A rear view of
the stranger might have suggested the idea of a spreading vine tacked
against a garden wall. Upon his breast, arms and legs, were exhibited an
infinite variety of figures; every one of which, however, appeared to have
reference to the general effect sought to be produced. The tattooing I
have described was of the brightest blue, and when contrasted with the
light olive-colour of the skin, produced an unique and even elegant
effect. A slight girdle of white tappa, scarcely two inches in width, but
hanging before and behind in spreading tassels, composed the entire
costume of the stranger.</p>
<p>He advanced surrounded by the islanders, carrying under one arm a small
roll of native cloth, and grasping in his other hand a long and richly
decorated spear. His manner was that of a traveller conscious that he is
approaching a comfortable stage in his journey. Every moment he turned
good-humouredly on the throng around him, and gave some dashing sort of
reply to their incessant queries, which appeared to convulse them with
uncontrollable mirth.</p>
<p>Struck by his demeanour, and the peculiarity of his appearance, so unlike
that of the shaven-crowned and face-tattooed natives in general, I
involuntarily rose as he entered the house, and proffered him a seat on
the mats beside me. But without deigning to notice the civility, or even
the more incontrovertible fact of my existence, the stranger passed on,
utterly regardless of me, and flung himself upon the further end of the
long couch that traversed the sole apartment of Marheyo's habitation.</p>
<p>Had the belle of the season, in the pride of her beauty and power, been
cut in a place of public resort by some supercilious exquisite, she could
not have felt greater indignation than I did at this unexpected slight.</p>
<p>I was thrown into utter astonishment. The conduct of the savages had
prepared me to anticipate from every newcomer the same extravagant
expressions of curiosity and regard. The singularity of his conduct,
however, only roused my desire to discover who this remarkable personage
might be, who now engrossed the attention of every one.</p>
<p>Tinor placed before him a calabash of poee-poee, from which the stranger
regaled himself, alternating every mouthful with some rapid exclamation,
which was eagerly caught up and echoed by the crowd that completely filled
the house. When I observed the striking devotion of the natives to him,
and their temporary withdrawal of all attention from myself, I felt not a
little piqued. The glory of Tommo is departed, thought I, and the sooner
he removes from the valley the better. These were my feelings at the
moment, and they were prompted by that glorious principle inherent in all
heroic natures—the strong-rooted determination to have the biggest
share of the pudding or to go without any of it.</p>
<p>Marnoo, that all-attractive personage, having satisfied his hunger and
inhaled a few whiffs from a pipe which was handed to him, launched out
into an harangue which completely enchained the attention of his auditors.</p>
<p>Little as I understood of the language, yet from his animated gestures and
the varying expression of his features—reflected as from so many
mirrors in the countenances around him, I could easily discover the nature
of those passions which he sought to arouse. From the frequent recurrence
of the words 'Nukuheva' and 'Frannee' (French), and some others with the
meaning of which I was acquainted, he appeared to be rehearsing to his
auditors events which had recently occurred in the neighbouring bays. But
how he had gained the knowledge of these matters I could not understand,
unless it were that he had just come from Nukuheva—a supposition
which his travel-stained appearance not a little supported. But, if a
native of that region, I could not account for his friendly reception at
the hands of the Typees.</p>
<p>Never, certainly, had I beheld so powerful an exhibition of natural
eloquence as Marnoo displayed during the course of his oration. The grace
of the attitudes into which he threw his flexible figure, the striking
gestures of his naked arms, and above all, the fire which shot from his
brilliant eyes, imparted an effect to the continually changing accents of
his voice, of which the most accomplished orator might have been proud. At
one moment reclining sideways upon the mat, and leaning calmly upon his
bended arm, he related circumstantially the aggressions of the French—their
hostile visits to the surrounding bays, enumerating each one in succession—Happar,
Puerka, Nukuheva, Tior,—and then starting to his feet and
precipitating himself forward with clenched hands and a countenance
distorted with passion, he poured out a tide of invectives. Falling back
into an attitude of lofty command, he exhorted the Typees to resist these
encroachments; reminding them, with a fierce glance of exultation, that as
yet the terror of their name had preserved them from attack, and with a
scornful sneer he sketched in ironical terms the wondrous intrepidity of
the French, who, with five war-canoes and hundreds of men, had not dared
to assail the naked warriors of their valley.</p>
<p>The effect he produced upon his audience was electric; one and all they
stood regarding him with sparkling eyes and trembling limbs, as though
they were listening to the inspired voice of a prophet.</p>
<p>But it soon appeared that Marnoo's powers were as versatile as they were
extraordinary. As soon as he had finished his vehement harangue, he threw
himself again upon the mats, and, singling out individuals in the crowd,
addressed them by name, in a sort of bantering style, the humour of which,
though nearly hidden from me filled the whole assembly with uproarious
delight.</p>
<p>He had a word for everybody; and, turning rapidly from one to another,
gave utterance to some hasty witticism, which was sure to be followed by
peals of laughter. To the females as well as to the men, he addressed his
discourse. Heaven only knows what he said to them, but he caused smiles
and blushes to mantle their ingenuous faces. I am, indeed, very much
inclined to believe that Marnoo, with his handsome person and captivating
manners, was a sad deceiver among the simple maidens of the island.</p>
<p>During all this time he had never, for one moment, deigned to regard me.
He appeared, indeed, to be altogether unconscious of my presence. I was
utterly at a loss how to account for this extraordinary conduct. I easily
perceived that he was a man of no little consequence among the islanders;
that he possessed uncommon talents; and was gifted with a higher degree of
knowledge than the inmates of the valley. For these reasons, I therefore
greatly feared lest having, from some cause or other, unfriendly feelings
towards me, he might exert his powerful influence to do me mischief.</p>
<p>It seemed evident that he was not a permanent resident of the vale, and
yet, whence could he have come? On all sides the Typees were girt in by
hostile tribes, and how could he possibly, if belonging to any of these,
be received with so much cordiality?</p>
<p>The personal appearance of the enigmatical stranger suggested additional
perplexities. The face, free from tattooing, and the unshaven crown, were
peculiarities I had never before remarked in any part of the island, and I
had always heard that the contrary were considered the indispensable
distinction of a Marquesan warrior. Altogether the matter was perfectly
incomprehensible to me, and I awaited its solution with no small degree of
anxiety.</p>
<p>At length, from certain indications, I suspected that he was making me the
subject of his remarks, although he appeared cautiously to avoid either
pronouncing my name, or looking in the direction where I lay. All at once
he rose from the mats where he had been reclining, and, still conversing,
moved towards me, his eye purposely evading mine, and seated himself
within less than a yard of me. I had hardly recovered from my surprise,
when he suddenly turned round, and, with a most benignant countenance
extended his right hand gracefully towards me. Of course I accepted the
courteous challenge, and, as soon as our palms met, he bent towards me,
and murmured in musical accents—'How you do?' 'How long you been in
this bay?' 'You like this bay?'</p>
<p>Had I been pierced simultaneously by three Happar spears, I could not have
started more than I did at hearing these simple questions. For a moment I
was overwhelmed with astonishment, and then answered something I know not
what; but as soon as I regained my self-possession, the thought darted
through my mind that from this individual I might obtain that information
regarding Toby which I suspected the natives had purposely withheld from
me. Accordingly I questioned him concerning the disappearance of my
companion, but he denied all knowledge of the matter. I then inquired from
whence he had come? He replied, from Nukuheva. When I expressed my
surprise, he looked at me for a moment, as if enjoying my perplexity, and
then with his strange vivacity, exclaimed,—'Ah! Me taboo,—me
go Nukuheva,—me go Tior,—me go Typee,—me go everywhere,—nobody
harm me,—me taboo.'</p>
<p>This explanation would have been altogether unintelligible to me, had it
not recalled to my mind something I had previously heard concerning a
singular custom among these islanders. Though the country is possessed by
various tribes, whose mutual hostilities almost wholly prelude any
intercourse between them; yet there are instances where a person having
ratified friendly relations with some individual belonging longing to the
valley, whose inmates are at war with his own, may, under particular
restrictions, venture with impunity into the country of his friend, where,
under other circumstances, he would have been treated as an enemy. In this
light are personal friendships regarded among them, and the individual so
protected is said to be 'taboo', and his person, to a certain extent, is
held as sacred. Thus the stranger informed me he had access to all the
valleys in the island.</p>
<p>Curious to know how he had acquired his knowledge of English, I questioned
him on the subject. At first, for some reason or other, he evaded the
inquiry, but afterwards told me that, when a boy, he had been carried to
sea by the captain of a trading vessel, with whom he had stayed three
years, living part of the time with him at Sidney in Australia, and that
at a subsequent visit to the island, the captain had, at his own request,
permitted him to remain among his countrymen. The natural quickness of the
savage had been wonderfully improved by his intercourse with the white
men, and his partial knowledge of a foreign language gave him a great
ascendancy over his less accomplished countrymen.</p>
<p>When I asked the now affable Marnoo why it was that he had not previously
spoken to me, he eagerly inquired what I had been led to think of him from
his conduct in that respect. I replied, that I had supposed him to be some
great chief or warrior, who had seen plenty of white men before, and did
not think it worth while to notice a poor sailor. At this declaration of
the exalted opinion I had formed of him, he appeared vastly gratified, and
gave me to understand that he had purposely behaved in that manner, in
order to increase my astonishment, as soon as he should see proper to
address me.</p>
<p>Marnoo now sought to learn my version of the story as to how I came to be
an inmate of the Typee valley. When I related to him the circumstances
under which Toby and I had entered it, he listened with evident interest;
but as soon as I alluded to the absence, yet unaccounted for, of my
comrade, he endeavoured to change the subject, as if it were something he
desired not to agitate. It seemed, indeed, as if everything connected with
Toby was destined to beget distrust and anxiety in my bosom.
Notwithstanding Marnoo's denial of any knowledge of his fate, I could not
avoid suspecting that he was deceiving me; and this suspicion revived
those frightful apprehensions with regard to my own fate, which, for a
short time past, had subsided in my breast.</p>
<p>Influenced by these feelings, I now felt a strong desire to avail myself
of the stranger's protection, and under his safeguard to return to
Nukuheva. But as soon as I hinted at this, he unhesitatingly pronounced it
to be entirely impracticable; assuring me that the Typees would never
consent to my leaving the valley. Although what he said merely confirmed
the impression which I had before entertained, still it increased my
anxiety to escape from a captivity which, however endurable, nay,
delightful it might be in some respects, involved in its issues a fate
marked by the most frightful contingencies.</p>
<p>I could not conceal from my mind that Toby had been treated in the same
friendly manner as I had been, and yet all their kindness terminated with
his mysterious disappearance. Might not the same fate await me?—a
fate too dreadful to think of. Stimulated by these considerations, I urged
anew my request to Marnoo; but he only set forth in stronger colours the
impossibility of my escape, and repeated his previous declaration that the
Typees would never be brought to consent to my departure.</p>
<p>When I endeavoured to learn from him the motives which prompted them to
hold me a prisoner, Marnoo again presumed that mysterious tone which had
tormented me with apprehension when I had questioned him with regard to
the fate of my companion.</p>
<p>Thus repulsed, in a manner which only served, by arousing the most
dreadful forebodings, to excite me to renewed attempts, I conjured him to
intercede for me with the natives, and endeavour to procure their consent
to my leaving them. To this he appeared strongly averse; but, yielding at
last to my importunities, he addressed several of the chiefs, who with the
rest had been eyeing us intently during the whole of our conversation. His
petition, however, was at once met with the most violent disapprobation,
manifesting itself in angry glances and gestures, and a perfect torrent of
passionate words, directed to both him and myself. Marnoo, evidently
repenting the step he had taken, earnestly deprecated the resentment of
the crowd, and, in a few moments succeeded in pacifying to some extent the
clamours which had broken out as soon as his proposition had been
understood.</p>
<p>With the most intense interest had I watched the reception his
intercession might receive; and a bitter pang shot through my heart at the
additional evidence, now furnished, of the unchangeable determination of
the islanders. Marnoo told me with evident alarm in his countenance, that
although admitted into the bay on a friendly footing with its inhabitants,
he could not presume to meddle with their concerns, as such procedure, if
persisted in, would at once absolve the Typees from the restraints of the
'taboo', although so long as he refrained from such conduct, it screened
him effectually from the consequences of the enmity they bore his tribe.
At this moment, Mehevi, who was present, angrily interrupted him; and the
words which he uttered in a commanding tone, evidently meant that he must
at once cease talking to me and withdraw to the other part of the house.
Marnoo immediately started up, hurriedly enjoining me not to address him
again, and as I valued my safety, to refrain from all further allusion to
the subject of my departure; and then, in compliance with the order of the
determined chief, but not before it had again been angrily repeated, he
withdrew to a distance.</p>
<p>I now perceived, with no small degree of apprehension, the same savage
expression in the countenances of the natives, which had startled me
during the scene at the Ti. They glanced their eyes suspiciously from
Marnoo to me, as if distrusting the nature of an intercourse carried on,
as it was, in a language they could not understand, and they seemed to
harbour the belief that already we had concerted measures calculated to
elude their vigilance.</p>
<p>The lively countenances of these people are wonderfully indicative of the
emotions of the soul, and the imperfections of their oral language are
more than compensated for by the nervous eloquence of their looks and
gestures. I could plainly trace, in every varying expression of their
faces, all those passions which had been thus unexpectedly aroused in
their bosoms.</p>
<p>It required no reflection to convince me, from what was going on, that the
injunction of Marnoo was not to be rashly slighted; and accordingly, great
as was the effort to suppress my feelings, I accosted Mehevi in a
good-humoured tone, with a view of dissipating any ill impression he might
have received. But the ireful, angry chief was not so easily mollified. He
rejected my advances with that peculiarly stern expression I have before
described, and took care by the whole of his behaviour towards me to show
the displeasure and resentment which he felt.</p>
<p>Marnoo, at the other extremity of the house, apparently desirous of making
a diversion in my favour, exerted himself to amuse with his pleasantries
the crowd about him; but his lively attempts were not so successful as
they had previously been, and, foiled in his efforts, he rose gravely to
depart. No one expressed any regret at this movement, so seizing his roll
of tappa, and grasping his spear, he advanced to the front of the pi-pi,
and waving his hand in adieu to the now silent throng, cast upon me a
glance of mingled pity and reproach, and flung himself into the path which
led from the house. I watched his receding figure until it was lost in the
obscurity of the grove, and then gave myself up to the most desponding
reflections.</p>
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