On the Makaloa Mat/Island Tales by Jack London

adzes, and poi-pounders of phallic design. When he and Kapiolani

made their royal progresses around the islands, their hosts had to

hide away their personal relics. For to the king, in theory,

belongs all property of his people; and with Kalakaua, when it came

to the old things, theory and practice were one.

“From him my father, Kanau, got the collecting bee in his bonnet,

and Hiwilani was likewise infected. But father was modern to his

finger-tips. He believed neither in the gods of the kahunas”

(priests) “nor of the missionaries. He didn’t believe in anything

except sugar stocks, horse-breeding, and that his grandfather had

been a fool in not collecting a few Isaac Davises and John Youngs

and brass carronades before he went to war with Kamehameha. So he

collected curios in the pure collector’s spirit; but my mother took

it seriously. That was why she went in for bones. I remember,

too, she had an ugly old stone-idol she used to yammer to and crawl

around on the floor before. It’s in the Deacon Museum now. I sent

it there after her death, and her collection of bones to the Royal

Mausoleum in Olokona.

“I don’t know whether you remember her father was Kaaukuu. Well,

he was, and he was a giant. When they built the Mausoleum, his

bones, nicely cleaned and preserved, were dug out of their hiding-

place, and placed in the Mausoleum. Hiwilani had an old retainer,

Ahuna. She stole the key from Kanau one night, and made Ahuna go

and steal her father’s bones out of the Mausoleum. I know. And he

must have been a giant. She kept him in one of her big jars. One

day, when I was a tidy size of a lad, and curious to know if

Kaaukuu was as big as tradition had him, I fished his intact lower

jaw out of the jar, and the wrappings, and tried it on. I stuck my

head right through it, and it rested around my neck and on my

shoulders like a horse collar. And every tooth was in the jaw,

whiter than porcelain, without a cavity, the enamel unstained and

unchipped. I got the walloping of my life for that offence,

although she had to call old Ahuna in to help give it to me. But

the incident served me well. It won her confidence in me that I

was not afraid of the bones of the dead ones, and it won for me my

Oxford education. As you shall see, if that car doesn’t arrive

first.

On the Makaloa Mat/Island Tales

58

“Old Ahuna was one of the real old ones with the hall-mark on him

and branded into him of faithful born-slave service. He knew more

about my mother’s family, and my father’s, than did both of them

put together. And he knew, what no living other knew, the burial-

place of centuries, where were hid the bones of most of her

ancestors and of Kanau’s. Kanau couldn’t worm it out of the old

fellow, who looked upon Kanau as an apostate.

“Hiwilani struggled with the old codger for years. How she ever

succeeded is beyond me. Of course, on the face of it, she was

faithful to the old religion. This might have persuaded Ahuna to

loosen up a little. Or she may have jolted fear into him; for she

knew a lot of the line of chatter of the old Huni sorcerers, and

she could make a noise like being on terms of utmost intimacy with

Uli, who is the chiefest god of sorcery of all the sorcerers. She

could skin the ordinary kahuna lapaau” (medicine man) “when it came

to praying to Lonopuha and Koleamoku; read dreams and visions and

signs and omens and indigestions to beat the band; make the

practitioners under the medicine god, Maiola, look like thirty

cents; pull off a pule hee incantation that would make them dizzy;

and she claimed to a practice of kahuna hoenoho, which is modern

spiritism, second to none. I have myself seen her drink the wind,

throw a fit, and prophesy. The aumakuas were brothers to her when

she slipped offerings to them across the altars of the ruined

heiaus” (temples) “with a line of prayer that was as unintelligible

to me as it was hair-raising. And as for old Ahuna, she could make

him get down on the floor and yammer and bite himself when she

pulled the real mystery dope on him.

“Nevertheless, my private opinion is that it was the anaana stuff

that got him. She snipped off a lock of his hair one day with a

pair of manicure scissors. This lock of hair was what we call the

maunu, meaning the bait. And she took jolly good care to let him

know she had that bit of his hair. Then she tipped it off to him

that she had buried it, and was deeply engaged each night in her

offerings and incantations to Uli.”

“That was the regular praying-to-death?” I queried in the pause of

Prince Akuli’s lighting his cigarette.

“Sure thing,” he nodded. “And Ahuna fell for it. First he tried

to locate the hiding-place of the bait of his hair. Failing that,

he hired a pahiuhiu sorcerer to find it for him. But Hiwilani

queered that game by threatening to the sorcerer to practise apo

leo on him, which is the art of permanently depriving a person of

the power of speech without otherwise injuring him.

“Then it was that Ahuna began to pine away and get more like a

corpse every day. In desperation he appealed to Kanau. I happened

to be present. You have heard what sort of a man my father was.

“‘Pig!’ he called Ahuna. ‘Swine-brains! Stinking fish! Die and

be done with it. You are a fool. It is all nonsense. There is

On the Makaloa Mat/Island Tales

59

nothing in anything. The drunken haole, Howard, can prove the

missionaries wrong. Square-face gin proves Howard wrong. The

doctors say he won’t last six months. Even square-face gin lies.

Life is a liar, too. And here are hard times upon us, and a slump

in sugar. Glanders has got into my brood mares. I wish I could

lie down and sleep for a hundred years, and wake up to find sugar

up a hundred points.’

“Father was something of a philosopher himself, with a bitter wit

and a trick of spitting out staccato epigrams. He clapped his

hands. ‘Bring me a high-ball,’ he commanded; ‘no, bring me two

high-balls.’ Then he turned on Ahuna. ‘Go and let yourself die,

old heathen, survival of darkness, blight of the Pit that you are.

But don’t die on these premises. I desire merriment and laughter,

and the sweet tickling of music, and the beauty of youthful motion,

not the croaking of sick toads and googly-eyed corpses about me

still afoot on their shaky legs. I’ll be that way soon enough if I

live long enough. And it will be my everlasting regret if I don’t

live long enough. Why in hell did I sink that last twenty thousand

into Curtis’s plantation? Howard warned me the slump was coming,

but I thought it was the square-face making him lie. And Curtis

has blown his brains out, and his head luna has run away with his

daughter, and the sugar chemist has got typhoid, and everything’s

going to smash.’

“He clapped his hands for his servants, and commanded: ‘Bring me

my singing boys. And the hula dancers–plenty of them. And send

for old Howard. Somebody’s got to pay, and I’ll shorten his six

months of life by a month. But above all, music. Let there be

music. It is stronger than drink, and quicker than opium.’

“He with his music druggery! It was his father, the old savage,

who was entertained on board a French frigate, and for the first

time heard an orchestra. When the little concert was over, the

captain, to find which piece he liked best, asked which piece he’d

like repeated. Well, when grandfather got done describing, what

piece do you think it was?”

I gave up, while the Prince lighted a fresh cigarette.

“Why, it was the first one, of course. Not the real first one, but

the tuning up that preceded it.”

I nodded, with eyes and face mirthful of appreciation, and Prince

Akuli, with another apprehensive glance at the old wahine and her

half-made hala lei, returned to his tale of the bones of his

ancestors.

“It was somewhere around this stage of the game that old Ahuna gave

in to Hiwilani. He didn’t exactly give in. He compromised.

That’s where I come in. If he would bring her the bones of her

mother, and of her grandfather (who was the father of Kaaukuu, and

who by tradition was rumoured to have been even bigger than his

On the Makaloa Mat/Island Tales

60

giant son, she would return to Ahuna the bait of his hair she was

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