Advertisement
Not a member of Pastebin yet?
Sign Up,
it unlocks many cool features!
- Maui went out from his home at Kauiki, fishing with his brothers. After they had caught some fine fish the brothers desired to return, but Maui persuaded them to go out farther. Then when they became tired and determined to go back, he made the seas stretch out and the shores recede until they could see no land. Then drawing the magic hook, he baited it with the Alae or sacred mud hen belonging to his Mother Hina. Queen Liliuokalani's family chant has the following reference to this myth:
- "Maui longed for fish for Hina-akeahi (Hina of the fire, his mother),
- Go hence to your father,
- There you will find line and hook.
- Manaiakalani is the book.
- Where the islands are caught,
- The ancient seas are connected.
- The great bird Alae is taken,
- The sister bird,
- Of that one of the hidden fire of Maui."
- Maui evidently had no scruples against using anything which would help him carry out his schemes.
- He indiscriminately robbed his friends and the gods alike.
- Down in the deep sea sank the hook with its struggling bait, until it was seized by "the land under the water."
- But Hina the mother saw the struggle of her sacred bird and hastened to the rescue. She caught a wing of the bird, but could not pull the Alae from the sacred hook. The wing was torn off. Then the fish gathered around the bait and tore it in pieces. If the bait could have been kept entire, then the land would have come up in a continent rather than as an island. Then the Hawaiian group would have been unbroken. But the bait broke-and the islands came as fragments from the under world.
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement