And here, strewn about, all dusty and disordered, were the precious antiques, and curios, and obsoletes, which to Oh-Oh were dear as the apple of his eye, or the memory of departed days.
The old man was exceedingly importunate, in directing attention to his relics; concerning each of which, he had an endless story to tell. Time would fail; nay, patience, to repeat his legends. So, in order, here follow the most prominent of his rarities:—
The identical Canoe, in which,
ages back, the god Unja came from
the bottom of
the sea.
(Very
ponderous; of lignum-vitae wood).
A stone Flower-pot, containing
in the original soil, Unja’s last
footprints, when
he embarked from Mardi for parts unknown.
(One
foot-print unaccountably reversed).
The Jaw-bones of Tooroorooloo,
a great orator in the days of Unja.
(Somewhat
twisted).
A quaint little Fish-hook.
(Made
from the finger-bones of Kravi the Cunning).
The mystic Gourd; carved all
over with cabalistic triangles, and
hypogrifs; by
study of which a reputed prophet, was said to have
obtained his inspiration.
(Slightly
redolent of vineyards).
The complete Skeleton of an
immense Tiger-shark; the bones of a
Pearl-shell-diver’s
leg inside.
(Picked
off the reef at low tide).
An inscrutable, shapeless
block of a mottled-hued, smoke-dried
wood.
(Three
unaccountable holes drilled through the middle).
A sort of ecclesiastical Fasces,
being the bony blades of nine sword-
fish, basket-hilted
with shark’s jaws, braided round and tasseled
with cords of
human hair.
(Now
obsolete).
The mystic Fan with which
Unja fanned himself when in trouble.
(Woven
from the leaves of the Water-Lily).
A Tripod of a Stork’s
Leg, supporting a nautilus shell, containing
the fragments
of a bird’s egg; into which, was said to have
been magically
decanted the soul of a deceased chief.
(Unfortunately
crushed in by atmospheric pressure).
Two clasped Right Hands, embalmed;
being those of twin warriors,
who thus died
on a battle-field.
(Impossible
to sunder).
A curious Pouch, or Purse,
formed from the skin of an Albatross’
foot, and decorated
with three sharp claws, naturally pertaining
to it.
(Originally
the property of a notorious old Tooth-per-Tooth).
A long tangled lock of Mermaid’s
Hair, much resembling the curling
silky fibres of
the finer sea-weed.
(Preserved
between fins of the dolphin).
A Mermaid’s Comb for
the toilet. The stiff serrated crest of a
Cook Storm-petrel
(Oh-Oh
was particularly curious concerning Mermaids).