The Hawaiian Romance Of Laieikawai eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 569 pages of information about The Hawaiian Romance Of Laieikawai.

The Hawaiian Romance Of Laieikawai eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 569 pages of information about The Hawaiian Romance Of Laieikawai.

The mother said, “I grant it in recompense for your guarding my polluted garment.

“If anyone else had come to get him, I would not have consented; since you come in person, I will not keep him back.

“Indeed, your brother has said that you are the one he loves best and thinks the most of; so let us go up and see your brother.

“Now you wait here; let me call the bird guardian of you two, who will bear us to the taboo house at the borders of Tahiti.”

Then the mother called: 

  O Halulu at the edge of the light,
  The bird who covers the sun,
  The heat returns to Kealohilani. 
  The bird who stops up the rain,
  The stream-heads are dry of Nuumealani. 
  The bird who holds back the clouds above,
  The painted clouds move across the ocean,
  The islands are flooded,
  Kahakaekaea trembles,
  The heavens flood not the earth. 
  O the lawless ones, the mischief makers! 
  O Mokukelekahiki! 
  O Kaeloikamalama! 
  The lawless ones who close the taboo house at the borders of Tahiti,
  Here is one from the heavens, a child of yours,
  Come and receive her, take her above to Awakea, the noonday.

Then that bird[71] drooped its wings down and its body remained aloft, then Laukieleula and Kahalaomapuana rested upon the bird’s wings and it flew and came to Awakea, the Noonday, the one who opens the door of the sun where Kaonohiokala lived.

At the time they arrived, the entrance to the chief’s house was blocked by thunderclouds.

Then Laukieleula ordered Noonday, “Open the way to the chief’s place!”

Then Noonday put forth her heat and the clouds melted before her; lo! the chief appeared sleeping right in the eye of the sun in the fire of its intensest heat, so he was named after this custom The Eye of the Sun.

Then Laukieleula seized hold of one of the sun’s rays and held it.  Then the chief awoke.

When Kohalaomapuana looked upon her brother his eyes were like lightning and his skin all over his body was like the heat, of the furnace where iron is melted.

Laukieleula cried out, “O my heavenly one, here is your sister, Kahalaomapuana, the one you love best, here she is come to seek you.”

When Kaonohiokala heard he awoke from sleep and signed with his eyes to Laukieleula to call the guards of the shade.  She called: 

  O big bright moon,
  O moving cloud of Kaialea,
  Guards of the shadows, present yourselves before the chief.

Then the guards of the shade came and stood before the chief.  Lo! the heat of the sun left the chief.

When the shadows came over the place where the chief lay, then he called his sister, and went to her, and wept over her, for his heart fainted with love for his youngest sister, and long had been the days of their separation.

When their wailing was ended he asked, “Whose child are you?”

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The Hawaiian Romance Of Laieikawai from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.