Samoa, A Hundred Years Ago And Long Before eBook

George Turner (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about Samoa, A Hundred Years Ago And Long Before.

Samoa, A Hundred Years Ago And Long Before eBook

George Turner (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 230 pages of information about Samoa, A Hundred Years Ago And Long Before.

22.  STONES.

1.  Two unchiselled “smooth stones of the stream” were kept in a temple at one of the villages, and guarded with great care.  No stranger or over-curious person was allowed to go near the place, under penalty of a beating from the custodians of these gods.  They represented good and not malicious death-causing gods.  The one made the yams, bread, fruit, and cocoa-nuts, and the other sent fish to the nets.

2.  Another stone was carefully housed in another village as the representative of a rain-making god.  When there was over-much rain, the stone was laid by the fire and kept heated till fine weather set in.  In a time of drought, the priest and his followers dressed up in fine mats, and went in procession to the stream, dipped the stone and prayed for rain.

3.  In a road leading to village plantations a stone stood which was said to have been a petrified coward.  He and his brother entered into compact that they would be brave in battle, and implored their god that if either fled that one should be changed into a stone.  The day came, the battle was fought, but one of the brothers turned and fled before the face of the enemy, and so was changed into a stone there and then by the god Fe’e.  All the people as they passed inland to work in their plantations kissed, or rather “smelled” the stone, and in coming back did the same.  Death was supposed to be the consequence of the neglect of this mark of deference to the power of the Fe’e.

4.  At the boundary line between two villages there were two stones, said to have been two young men who quarrelled, fought, and killed each other on that very spot, and whose bodies were immediately changed into stones.  If any quarrel took place in either of these two villages there was never any general disturbance.  “Go and settle it at the stones” was the standing order; and so all who were inclined to be demonstrative in any affair of honesty or honour went to the stones and fought it out.  If either of the duellists was knocked down, that was the final settlement.  No one else interfered, and so, by common consent in such matters, these two villages were noted for peace and order.

5.  In a district said to have been early populated by settlers from Fiji, a number of fancy Fijian stones were kept in a temple, and worshipped in time of war.  The priest, in consulting them, built them up in the form of a wall, and then watched to see how they fell.  If they fell to the westward, it was a sign that the enemy there was to be driven; but if they fell to eastward, that was a warning of defeat, and delay in making an attack was ordered accordingly.

The iconoclast native teachers from Tahiti, in the early stage of the mission, when such stones were given up to them, had them taken off to the beach and broken into fragments, and so stamp out at once the heathenism with which they were associated.  Hardly a single relic of the kind can be found at the present day.

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Samoa, A Hundred Years Ago And Long Before from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.