KE-AO-MELE-MELE, THE MAID
OF THE GOLDEN CLOUD
The Hawaiians never found
gold in their islands. The mountains being of recent volcanic origin do
not show traces of the precious metals; but hovering over the
mountain-tops clustered the glorious golden clouds built up by damp
winds from the seas. The Maiden of the Golden Cloud belonged to the
cloud mountains and was named after their golden glow.
Her name in the Hawaiian
tongue was Ke-ao-mele-mele (The Golden Cloud). She was said to be one of
the first persons brought by the gods to find a home in the Paradise of
the Pacific.
In the ancient times, the
ancestors of the Hawaiians came from far-off ocean lands, for which they
had different names, such as The Shining Heaven, The Floating Land of
Kane, The Far-off White Land of Kahiki, and Kuai-he-lani. It was from
Kuai-he-lani that the Maiden of the Golden Cloud was called to live in
Hawaii.
In this legendary land lived
Mo-o-inanea (self-reliant dragon). She cared for the first children of
the gods, one of whom was named Hina, later known in Polynesian
mythology as Moon Goddess.
Mo-o-inanea took her to Ku,
one of the gods. They lived together many years and a family of children
came to them.
Two of the great gods of
Polynesia, Kane and Kanaloa, had found a beautiful place above Honolulu
on Oahu, one of the Hawaiian Islands. Here they determined to build a
home for the first-born child of Hina.
Thousands of eepa (gnome)
people lived around this place, which was called Waolani. The gods had
them build a temple which was also called Waolani (divine forest).
When the time came for the
birth of the child, clouds and fogs crept over the land, thunder rolled
and lightning flashed, red torrents poured down the hillsides, strong
winds hurled the rain through bending trees, earthquakes shook the land,
huge waves rolled inland from the sea. Then a beautiful boy was born.
All these signs taken together signified the birth of a chief of the
highest degree--even of the family of the gods.
Kane and Kanaloa sent their
sister Anuenue (rainbow) to get the child of Ku and Hina that they might
care for it. All three should be the caretakers.
Anuenue went first to the
place where Mo-o-inanea dwelt, to ask her if it would be right. Mo-o-inanea
said she might go, but if they brought up that child he must not have a
wife from any of the women of Hawaii-nui-akea (great wide Hawaii).
Anuenue asked, "Suppose I
get that child; who is to give it the proper name?"
Mo-o-inanea said: "You bring
the child to our brothers and they will name this child. They have sent
you, and the responsibility of the name rests on them."
Anuenue said good-by, and in
the twinkling of an eye stood at the door of the house where Ku dwelt.
Ku looked outside and saw
the bright glow of the rainbow, but no cloud or rain, so he called Hina.
"Here is a strange thing. You must come and look at it. There is no rain
and there are no clouds or mist, but there is a rainbow at our door."
They went out, but Anuenue
had changed her rainbow body and stood before them as a very beautiful
woman, wrapped only in the colors of the rainbow.
Ku and Hina began to shiver
with a nameless terror as they looked at this strange maiden. They
faltered out a welcome, asking her to enter their house.
As she came near to them Ku
said, "From what place do you come?"
Anuenue said: "I am from the
sky, a messenger sent by my brothers to get your child that they may
bring it up. When grown, if the child wants its parents, we will bring
it back. If it loves us it shall stay with us."
Hina bowed her head and Ku
wailed, both thinking seriously for a little while. Then Ku said: "If
Mo-o-inanea has sent you she shall have the child. You may take this
word to her."
Anuenue replied: "I have
just come from her and the word I brought you is her word. If I go away
I shall not come again."
Hina said to Ku: "We must
give this child according to her word. It is not right to disobey Mo-o-inanea."
Anuenue took the child and
studied the omens for its future, then she said, "This child is of the
very highest, the flower on the top of the tree."
She prepared to take the
child away, and bade the parents farewell. She changed her body into the
old rainbow colors shining out of a mist, then she wrapped the child in
the rainbow, bearing it away.
Ku and Hina went out looking
up and watching the cloud of rainbow colors floating in the sky. Strong,
easy winds blew and carried this cloud out over the ocean. The
navel-string had not been cut off, so Anuenue broke off part and threw
it into the ocean, where it became the Hee-makoko, a blood-red squid.
This is the legendary origin of that kind of squid.
Anuenue passed over many
islands, coming at last to Waolani to the temple built by the gnomes
under Kane and Kanaloa. They consecrated the child, and cut off another
part of the navel-cord. Kanaloa took it to the Nuuanu pali back of
Honolulu, to the place called Kaipu-o-Lono. Kane and Kanaloa consulted
about servants to live with the boy, and decided that they must have
only ugly ones, who would not be desired as wives by their boy.
Therefore they gathered together the lame, crooked, deformed, and blind
among the gnome people. There were hundreds of these living in different
homes, and performing different tasks. Anuenue was the ruler over all of
them. This child was named Kahanai-a-ke-Akua (the one adopted by the
gods). He was given a very high tabu by Kane and Kanaloa. No one was
allowed to stand before him and no person's shadow could fall upon him.
Hina again conceived. The
signs of this child appeared in the heavens and were seen on Oahu. Kane
wanted to send Lanihuli and Waipuhia, their daughters, living near the
pali of Waolani and Nuuanu. The girls asked where they should go.
Kane said: "We send you to
the land Kuai-he-lani, a land far distant from Hawaii, to get the child
of Hina. If the parents ask you about your journey, tell them you have
come for the child. Tell our names and refer to Mo-o-inanea. You must
now look at the way by which to go to Kuai-he-lani.
They looked and saw a great
bird--Iwa. They got on this bird and were carried far up in the heavens.
By and by the bird called two or three times. The girls were frightened
and looking down saw the bright shining land Kuai-he-lani below them.
The bird took them to the door of Ku's dwelling-place.
Ku and Hina were caring for
a beautiful girl-baby. They looked up and saw two fine women at their
door. They invited them in and asked whence they came and why they
travelled.
The girls told them they
were sent by the gods Kane and Kanaloa. Suddenly a new voice was heard.
Mo-o-inanea was by the house. She called to Ku and to Hina, telling them
to give the child into the hands of the strangers, that they might take
her to Waka, a great priestess, to be brought up by her in the ohia
forests of the island of Hawaii. She named that girl Paliula, and
explained to the parents that when Paliula should grow up, to be
married, the boy of Waolani should be her husband. The girls then took
the babe. They were all carried by the bird, Iwa, far away in the sky to
Waolani, where they told Kane and Kanaloa the message or prophecy of
Mo-o-inanea.
The gods sent Iwa with the
child to Waka, on Hawaii, to her dwelling-place in the districts of Hilo
and Puna where she was caring for all kinds of birds in the branches of
the trees and among the flowers.
Waka commanded the birds to
build a house for Paliula. This was quickly done. She commanded the bird
Iwa to go to Nuumea-lani, a far-off land above Kuai-he-lani, the place
where Mo-o-inanea was now living.
It was said that Waka, by
her magic power, saw in that land two trees, well cared for by
multitudes of servants; the name of one was "Makalei." This was a tree
for fish. All kinds of fish would go to it. The second was "Kalala-ika-wai."
This was the tree used for getting all kinds of food. Call this tree and
food would appear.
Waka wanted Mo-o-inanea to
send these trees to Hawaii.
Mo-o-inanea gave these trees
to Iwa, who brought them to Hawaii and gave them to Waka. Waka rejoiced
and took care of them. The bird went back to Waolani, telling Kane and
Kanaloa all the journey from first to last.
The gods gave the girls
resting-places in the fruitful lands under the shadow of the beautiful
Nuuanu precipices.
Waka watched over Paliula
until she grew up, beautiful like the moon of Mahea-lani (full moon).
The fish tree, Makalei,
which made the fish of all that region tame, was planted by the side of
running water, in very restful places spreading all along the
river-sides to the seashore. Fish came to every stream where the trees
grew, and filled the waters.
The other tree was planted
and brought prepared food for Paliula. The hidden land where this place
was has always been called Paliula, a beautiful green spot-a home for
fruits and flowers and birds in a forest wilderness.
When Paliula had grown up,
Waka went to Waolani to meet Kane, Kanaloa, and Anuenue. There she saw
Kahanai-a-ke-Akua (the boy brought up by the gods) and desired him for
Paliula's husband. There was no man so splendid and no woman so
beautiful as these two. The caretakers decided that they must be husband
and wife.
Waka returned to the island
Hawaii to prepare for the coming of the people from Waolani.
Waka built new houses finer
and better than the first, and covered them with the yellow feathers of
the Mamo bird with the colors of the rainbow resting over. Anuenue had
sent some of her own garments of rainbows.
Then Waka went again to
Waolani to talk with Kane and Kanaloa and their sister Anuenue.
They said to her: "You
return, and Anuenue will take Kahanai and follow. When the night of
their arrival comes, lightning will play over all the mountains above
Waolani and through the atmosphere all around the temple, even to
Hawaii. After a while, around your home the leaves of the trees will
dance and sing and the ohia-trees themselves bend back and forth shaking
their beautiful blossoms. Then you may know that the Rainbow Maiden and
the boy are by your home on the island of Hawaii.
Waka returned to her home in
the tangled forest above Hilo. There she met her adopted daughter and
told her about the coming of her husband.
Soon the night of rolling
thunder and flashing lightning came. The people of all the region around
Hilo were filled with fear. Kane-hekili (flashing lightning) was a
miraculous body which Kane had assumed. He had gone before the boy and
the rainbow, flashing his way through the heavens.
The gods had commanded Kane-hekili
to dwell in the heavens in all places wherever the gods desired him to
be, so that he could go wherever commanded. He always obeyed without
questioning.
The thunder and lightning
played over ocean and land while the sun was setting beyond the islands
in the west.
After a time the trees bent
over, the leaves danced and chanted their songs. The flowers made a
glorious halo as they swayed back and forth in their dances.
Kane told the Rainbow Maiden
to take their adopted child to Hawaii-nui-akea.
When she was ready, she
heard her brothers calling the names of trees which were to go with her
on her journey. Some of the legends say that Laka, the hula-god, was
dancing before the two. The tree people stood before the Rainbow Maiden
and the boy, ready to dance all the way to Hawaii. The tree people are
always restless and in ceaseless motion. The gods told them to sing
together and dance. Two of the tree people were women, Ohia and Lamakea.
Lamakea is a native whitewood tree. There are large trees at Waialae in
the mountains of the island Oahu. Ohia is a tree always full of fringed
red blossoms. They were very beautiful in their wind bodies. They were
kupuas, or wizards, and could be moving trees or dancing women as they
chose.
The Rainbow Maiden took the
boy in her arms up into the sky, and with the tree people went on her
journey. She crossed over the islands to the mountains of the island
Hawaii, then went down to find Paliula.
She placed the tree people
around the house to dance and sing with soft rustling noises.
Waka heard the chants of the
tree people and opened the door of the glorious house, calling for
Kahanai to come in. When Paliula saw him, her heart fluttered with
trembling delight, for she knew this splendid youth was the husband
selected by Waka, the prophetess. Waka called the two trees belonging to
Paliula to bring plenty of fish and food.
Then Waka and Anuenue left
their adopted children in the wonderful yellow feather house.
The two young people, when
left together, talked about their birthplaces and their parents. Paliula
first asked Kahanai about his land and his father and mother. He told
her that he was the child of Ku and Hina from Kuai-he-lani, brought up
by Kane and the other gods at Waolani.
The girl went out and asked
Waka about her parents, and learned that this was her first-born
brother, who was to be her husband because they had very high divine
blood. Their descendants would be the chiefs of the people. This
marriage was a command from parents and ancestors and Mo-o-inanea.
She went into the house,
telling the brother who she was, and the wish of the gods.
After ten days they were
married and lived together a long time.
At last, Kahanai desired to
travel all around Hawaii. In this journey he met Poliahu, the
white-mantle girl of Mauna Kea, the snow-covered mountain of the island
Hawaii.
Meanwhile, in Kuai-he-lani,
Ku and Hina were living together. One day Mo-o-inanea called to Hina,
telling her that she would be the mother of a more beautiful and
wonderful child than her other two children. This child should live in
the highest places of the heavens and should have a multitude of bodies
which could be seen at night as well as in the day.
Mo-o-inanea went away to
Nuumea-lani and built a very wonderful house in Ke-alohi-lani (shining
land), a house always turning around by day and by night like the ever
moving clouds, indeed, it was built of all kinds of clouds and covered
with fogs. There she made a spring of flowing water and put it outside
for the coming child to have as a bath. There she planted the seeds of
magic flowers, Kanikawi and Kanikawa, legendary plants of old Hawaii.
Then she went to Kuai-he-lani and found Ku and Hina asleep. She took a
child out of the top of the head of Hina and carried it away to the new
home, naming it Ke-ao-mele-mele (the yellow cloud), the Maiden of the
Golden Cloud, a wonderfully beautiful girl.
No one with a human body was
permitted to come to this land of Nuumea-lani. No kupuas were allowed to
make trouble for the child.
The ao-opua (narrow-pointed
clouds) were appointed watchmen serving Ke-ao-mele-mele, the Maiden of
the Golden Cloud.
All the other clouds were
servants: the ao-opua-kakahiaka (morning clouds), ao-opua-ahiahi
(evening clouds), ao-opua-aumoe (night clouds), ao-opua-kiei (peeking
clouds), ao-opua-aha-lo (down-looking clouds), ao-opua-ku (image shaped
clouds rising at top of sea), opua-hele (morning-flower clouds),
opua-noho-mai (resting clouds), opua-mele-mele (gold-colored clouds),
opua-lani (clouds high up), ka-pae-opua (at surface of sea or clouds
along the horizon), ka-lani-opua (clouds up above horizon), ka-makao-ka-lani
(clouds in the eye of the sun), ka-wele-lau-opua (clouds highest in the
sky).
All these clouds were
caretakers watching for the welfare of that girl. Mo-o-inanea gave them
their laws for service.
She took Ku-ke-ao-loa (the
long cloud of Ku) and put him at the door of the house of clouds, with
great magic power. He was to be the messenger to all the cloud-lands of
the parents and ancestors of this girl.
"The Eye of the Sun" was the
cloud with magic power to see all things passing underneath near or far.
Then there was the opua-alii,
cloud-chief with the name Ka-ao-opua-ola (the sharp-pointed living
cloud). This was the sorcerer and astronomer, never weary, never tired,
knowing and watching over all things.
Mo-o-inanea gave her mana-nui
or great magic power, to Ke-ao-mele-mele--with divine tabus. She made
this child the heir of all the divine islands, therefore she was able to
know what was being done everywhere. She understood how the Kahanai had
forsaken his sister to live with Poliahu. So she went to Hawaii to aid
her sister Paliula.
When Mo-o-inanea had taken
the child from the head of Hina, Ku and Hina were aroused. Ku went out
and saw wonderful cloud images standing near the house, like men. Ku and
Hina watched these clouds shining and changing colors in the light of
the dawn, as the sun appeared. The light of the sun streamed over the
skies. For three days these changing clouds were around them. Then in
the midst of these clouds appeared a strange land of the skies
surrounded by the ao-opua (the narrow-pointed clouds). In the night of
the full moon, the aka (ghost) shadow of that land leaped up into the
moon and became fixed there. This was the Alii-wahine-aka-malu (the
queen of shadows), dwelling in the moon.
Ku and Hina did not
understand the meaning of these signs or shadows, so they went back into
the house, falling into deep sleep.
Mo-o-inanea spoke to Hina in
her dreams, saying that these clouds were signs of her daughter born
from the head-a girl having great knowledge and miraculous power in
sorcery, who would take care of them in their last days. They must learn
all the customs of kilo-kilo, or sorcery.
Mo-o-inanea again sent Ku-ke-ao-loa
to the house of Ku, that cloud appearing as a man at their door.
They asked who he was. He
replied: "I am a messenger sent to teach you the sorcery or witcheries
of cloud-land. You must have this knowledge that you may know your
cloud-daughter. Let us begin our work at this time."
They all went outside the
house and sat down on a stone at the side of the door.
Ku-ke-ao-loa looked up and
called Mo-o-inanea by name. His voice went to Ke-alohi-lani, and Mo-o-inanea
called for all the clouds to come with their ruler Ke-ao-mele-mele.
"Arise, O yellow cloud,
Arise, O cloud-the eye of the sun,
Arise, O beautiful daughters of the skies,
Shine in the eyes of the sun, arise!"
Ke-ao-mele-mele arose and
put on her glorious white kapas like the snow on Mauna Kea. At this time
the cloud watchmen over Kuai-he-lani were revealing their cloud forms to
Hina and Ku. The Long Cloud told Hina and Ku to look sharply into the
sky to see the meaning of all the cloud forms--which were servants of
the divine chiefess, their habits of meeting, moving, separating, their
forms, their number, the stars appearing through them, the fixed stars
and moving clouds, the moving stars and moving clouds, the course of the
winds among the different clouds.
When he had taught Ku and
Hina the sorcery of cloud-land, he disappeared and returned to
Ke-alohi-lani.
Some time afterward, Ku went
out to the side of their land. He saw a cloud of very beautiful form,
appearing like a woman. This was resting in the sky above his head. Hina
woke up, missed Ku, looked out and saw Ku sitting on the beach watching
the clouds above him. She went to him and by her power told him that he
had the desire to travel and that he might go on his journey and find
the woman of his vision.
A beautiful chiefess, Hiilei,
was at that time living in one of the large islands of the heavens. Ku
and Hina went to this place. Ku married Hiilei, and Hina found a chief
named Olopana and married him. Ku and Hiilei had a red-skin child, a
boy, whom they named Kau-mai-liula (twilight resting in the sky). This
child was taken by Mo-o-inanea to Ke-alohi-lani to live with
Ke-ao-mele-mele. Olopana and Hina had a daughter whom they called
Kau-lana-iki-pokii (beautiful daughter of sunset), who was taken by Ku
and Hiilei.
Hina then called to the
messenger cloud to come and carry a request to Mo-o-inanea that
Kau-mai-liula be given to her and Olopana. This was done. So they were
all separated from each other, but in the end the children were taken to
Hawaii.
Meanwhile Paliula was living
above Hilo with her husband Kahanai-a-ke-Akua (adopted son of the gods).
Kahanai became restless and determined to see other parts of the land,
so he started on a journey around the islands. He soon met a fine young
man Waiola (water of life).
Waiola had never seen any
one so glorious in appearance as the child of the gods, so he fell down
before him, saying: "I have never seen any one so divine as you. You
must have come from the skies. I will belong to you through the coming
years."
The chief said, "I take you
as my aikane [bosom friend] to the last days."
They went down to Waiakea, a
village near Hilo, and met a number of girls covered with wreaths of
flowers and leaves. Kahanai sent Waiola to sport with them. He himself
was of too high rank. One girl told her brother Kanuku to urge the chief
to come down, and sent him leis. He said he could not receive their
gift, but must wear his own lei. He called for his divine caretaker to
send his garlands, and immediately the most beautiful rainbows wrapped
themselves around his neck and shoulders, falling down around his body.
Then he came down to Waiakea.
The chief took Kanuku also as a follower and went on up the coast to
Hamakua.
The chief looked up Mauna
Kea and there saw the mountain women, who lived in the white land above
the trees. Poliahu stood above the precipices in her kupua-ano (wizard
character), revealing herself as a very beautiful woman wearing a white
mantle.
When the chief and his
friends came near the cold place where she was sitting, she invited them
to her home, inland and mountainward.
The chief asked his friends
to go with him to the mountain house of the beauty of Mauna Kea.
They were well entertained.
Poliahu called her sisters, Lilinoe and Ka-lau-a-kolea, beautiful girls,
and gave them sweet-sounding shells to blow. All through the night they
made music and chanted the stirring songs of the grand mountains. The
chief delighted in Poliahu and lived many months on the mountain.
One morning Paliula in her
home above Hilo awoke from a dream in which she saw Poliahu and the
chief living together, so she told Waka, asking if the dream were true.
Waka, by her magic power, looked over the island and saw the three young
men living with the three maidens of the snow mantle. She called with a
penetrating voice for the chief to return to his own home. She went in
the form of a great bird and brought him back.
But Poliahu followed, met
the chief secretly and took him up to Mauna Kea again, covering the
mountain with snow so that Waka could not go to find them.
Waka and the bird friends of
Paliula could not reach the mountain-top because of the cold. Waka went
to Waolani and told Anuenue about Paliula's trouble.
Anuenue was afraid that Kane
and Kanaloa might hear that the chief had forsaken his sister, and was
much troubled, so she asked Waka to go with her to see Mo-o-inanea at
Ke-alohi-lani, but the gods Kane and Kanaloa could not be deceived. They
understood that there was trouble, and came to meet them.
Kane told Waka to return and
tell the girl to be patient; the chief should be punished for deserting
her.
Waka returned and found that
Paliula had gone away wandering in the forest, picking-lehua flowers on
the way up toward the Lua Pele, the volcano pit of Pele, the goddess of
fire. There she had found a beautiful girl and took her as an aikane
(friend) to journey around Hawaii. They travelled by way of the
districts of Puna, Kau, and Kona to Waipio, where she saw a fine-looking
man standing above a precipice over which leaped the wonderful
mist-falls of Hiilawe. This young chief married the beautiful girl
friend of Paliula.
Poliahu by her kupua power
recognized Paliula, and told the chief that she saw her with a new
husband.
Paliula went on to her old
home and rested many days. Waka then took her from island to island
until they were near Oahu. When they came to the beach, Paliula leaped
ashore and went up to Manoa Valley. There she rushed Into the forest and
climbed the ridges and precipices. {p. 136} She wandered through the
rough places, her clothes torn and ragged.
Kane and Kanaloa saw her
sitting on the mountain-side. Kane sent servants to find her and bring
her to live with them at Waolani. When she came to the home of the gods
in Nuuanu Valley she thought longingly of her husband and sang this
mele:
"Lo, at Waolani is my lei of the blood-red rain,
The lei of the misty rain gathered and put together,
Put together in my thought with tears.
Spoiled is the body by love,
Dear in the eyes of the lover.
My brother, the first-born,
Return, oh, return, my brother."
Paliula, chanting this,
turned away from Waolani to Waianae and dwelt for a time with the
chiefess Kalena.
While Paliula was living
with the people of the cold winds of Waianae she wore leis of mokahana
berries and fragrant grass, and was greatly loved by the family. She
went up the mountain to a great gulch. She lay down to sleep, but heard
a sweet voice saying, "You cannot sleep on the edge of that gulch." She
was frequently awakened by that voice. She went on up the
mountain-ridges above Waianae. At night when she rested she heard the
voices again and again. This was the voice of Hii-lani-wai, who was
teaching the hula dance to the girls of Waianae. Paliula wanted to see
the one who had such a sweet voice, so went along the pali and came to a
hula house, but the house was closed tight and she could not look in.
She sat down outside. Soon
Hii-lani-wai opened the door and saw Paliula and asked her to come in.
It was the first time Paliula had seen this kind of dancing. Her delight
in the dance took control of her mind, and she forgot her husband and
took Hii-lani-wai as her aikane, dwelling with her for a time.
One day they went out into
the forest. Kane had sent the dancing trees from Waolani to meet them.
While in the forest they heard the trees singing and dancing like human
beings. Hii-lani-wai called this a very wonderful thing. Paliula told
her that she had seen the trees do this before. The trees made her glad.
They went down to the
seaside and visited some days. Paliula desired a boat to go to the
island of Kauai. The people told them of the dangerous waters, but the
girls were stubborn, so they were given a very small boat. Hii-lani-wai
was steering, and Paliula was paddling and bailing out the water. The
anger of the seas did not arise. On the way Paliula fell asleep, but the
boat swiftly crossed the channel. Their boat was covered with all the
colors of the rainbow. Some women on land at last saw them and beckoned
with their hands for them to come ashore.
Malu-aka (shadow of peace)
was the most beautiful of all the women on Kauai. She was kind and
hospitable and took them to her house. The people came to see these
wonderful strangers. Paliula told Malu-aka her story. She rested, with
the Kauai girls, then went with Malu-aka over the island and learned the
dances of Kauai, becoming noted throughout the island for her wonderful
grace and skill, dancing like the wind, feet not touching the ground.
Her songs and the sound of the whirling dance were lifted by the winds
and carried into the dreams of Ke-ao-mele-mele.
Meanwhile, Ke-ao-mele-mele
was living with her cloud-watchmen and Mo-o-inanea at Ke-alohi-lani. She
began to have dreams, hearing a sweet voice singing and seeing a
glorious woman dancing, while winds were whispering in the forests. For
five nights she heard the song and the sound of the dance. Then she told
Mo-o-inanea, who explained her dream, saying: "That is the voice of
Paliula, your sister, who is dancing and singing near the steep places
of Kauai. Her brother-husband has forsaken her and she has had much
trouble. He is living with Poliahu on Hawaii."
When Ke-ao-mele-mele heard
this, she thought she would go and live with her sister. Mo-o-inanea
approved of the thought and gave her all kinds of kupua power. She told
her to go and see the god Kane, who would tell her what to do.
At last she started on her
journey with her watching clouds. She went to see Hina and Olopana, and
Ku and Hiilei. She saw Kau-mai-liula (twilight resting in the sky), who
was very beautiful, like the deep red flowers of the ohia in the shadows
of the leaves of the tree. She determined to come back and marry him
after her journey to Oahu.
When she left Kuai-he-lani
with her followers she flew like a bird over the waves of the sea. Soon
she passed Niihau and came to Kauai to the place where Paliula was
dancing, and as a cloud with her cloud friends spied out the land. The
soft mists of her native land were scattered over the people by these
clouds above them. Paliula was reminded of her birth-land and the loved
people of her home.
Ke-ao-mele-mele saw the
beauty of the dance and understood the love expressed in the chant. She
flew away from Kauai, crossed the channel, carne to Waolani, met Kane
and Kanaloa and told them she had come to learn from them what was the
right thing to do for the sister and the husband who had deserted her.
Kane suggested a visit to Hawaii to see Paliula and the chief, so she
flew over the islands to Hawaii. Then she went up the mountain with the
ao-pii-kai (a cloud rising from the sea and climbing the mountain) until
she saw Poliahu and her beautiful sisters.
Poliahu looked down the
mountain-side and saw a woman coming, but she looked again and the woman
had disappeared. In a little while a golden cloud rested on the summit
of the mountain. It was the maid in her cloud body watching her brother
and the girl of the white mountains. For more than twenty days she
remained in that place. Then she returned to Waolani on Oahu.
Ke-ao-mele-mele determined
to learn the hulas and the accompanying songs. Kane told her she ought
to learn these things. There was a fine field for dancing at the foot of
the mountain near Waolani, and Kane had planted a large kukui-tree by
its side to give it shade.
Kane and his sister Anuenue
went to this field and sat down in their place. The daughters of Nuuanu
Pali were there. Kane sent Ke-ao-mele-mele after the dancing-goddess,
Kapo, who lived at Mauna Loa. She was the sister of the poison-gods and
knew the art of sorcery, Ke-ao-mele-mele took gifts, went to Kapo, made
offerings, and thus for the first time secured a goddess for the hula.
Dancing the Hula
Kapo taught Ke-ao-mele-mele
the chants and the movements of the different hulas until she was very
skilful. She flew over the seas to Oahu and showed the gods her skill.
Then, she went to Kauai, danced on the surf and in the clouds and above
the forests and in the whirlwinds. Each night she went to one of the
other islands, danced in the skies and over the waters, and returned
home. At last she went to Hawaii to Mauna Kea, where she saw Kahanai,
her brother. She persuaded him to leave the maiden of the snow mantle
and return to Waolani. Paliula and her friends had returned to the home
with Waka, where she taught the leaves of clinging vines and the flowers
and leaves on the tender swinging branches of the forest trees new
motions in their dances with the many kinds of winds.
One day Kahanai saw signs
among the stars and in the clouds which made him anxious to travel, so
he asked Kane for a canoe. Kane called the eepa and the menehune people
and told them to make canoes to carry Kahanai to his parents.
These boats were made in the
forests of Waolani. When the menehunes finished their boat they carried
it down Nuuanu Valley to Puunui. There they rested and many of the
little folk came to help, taking the canoe down, step by step, to the
mouth of the Nuuanu stream, where they had the aid of the river to the
ocean.
The menehunes left the boat
floating in the water and went back to Waolani. Of the fairy people it
was said: "No task is difficult. It is the work of one hand."
The Misty Pali, Nuuanu
On the way down Nuuanu
Valley the menehunes came to Ka-opua-ua (storm cloud). They heard the
shouting of other people and hurried along until they met the Namunawa
people, the eepas, carrying a boat, pushing it down. When they told the
eepas that the chief had already started on his journey with double
canoes, the eepas left their boat there to slowly decay, but it is said
that it lasted many centuries.
The people who made this
boat were the second class of the little people living at Waolani,
having the characters of human beings, yet having also the power of the
fairy people. These were the men of the time of Kane and the gods.
Kahanai and his friends were
in their boat when a strong wind swept down Nuuanu, carrying the dry
leaves of the mountains and sweeping them into the sea. The waves were
white as the boat was blown out into the ocean. Kahanai steered by magic
power, and the boat like lightning swept away from the islands to the
homes of Ku. and Hina. The strong wind and the swift current were with
the boat, and the voyage was through the waves like swift lightning
flashing through clouds.
Ku and Hiilei saw the boat
coming. Its signs were in the heavens. Ku came and asked the travellers,
"What boat is this, and from what place has it come?"
Kahanai said, "This boat has
come from Waolani, the home of the gods Kane and Kanaloa and of
Ke-ao-mele-mele."
Then Ku asked again, "Whose
child are you?"
He replied, "The son of Ku
and Hina."
"How many other children in
your family?"
He said: " There are three
of us. I am the boy and there are two sisters, Paliula and
Ke-ao-mele-mele. I have been sent by Ke-ao-mele-mele to get
Kau-mai-liula and Kau-lana-iki-pokii to go to Oahu."
Ku and his wife agreed to
the call of the messenger for their boy Kau-mai-liula.
When Kahanai saw him he knew
that there was no other one so fine as this young man who quickly
consented to go to Oahu with his servants.
Ku called for some beautiful
red boats with red sails, red paddles,-everything red. Four good boatmen
were provided for each boat, men who came from the land of Ulu-nui-the
land of the yellow sea and the black sea of Kane--and obeyed the call of
Mo-o-inanea. They had kupua power. They were relatives of Kane and
Kanaloa.
The daughter of Hina and
Olopana, Kau-lana-iki-pokii, cried to go with her brother, but Mo-o-inanea
called for her dragon family to make a boat for her and ordered one of
the sorcerer dragons to go with her and guard her. They called the most
beautiful shells of the sea to become the boats for the girl and her
attendants. They followed the boats of Kahanai. With one stroke of the
paddles the boats passed through the seas around the home of the gods.
With the second stroke they broke through all the boundaries of the
great ocean and with the third dashed into the harbor of old Honolulu,
then known as Kou.
When the boats of Kahanai
and Kau-mai-liula came to the surf of Mamala, there was great shouting
inland of Kou, the voices of the eepas of Waolani. Mists and rainbows
rested over Waolani. The menehunes gathered in great multitudes at the
call of Kane, who had seen the boats approaching.
The menehune people ran down
to lift up the boats belonging to the young chief. They made a line from
Waolani to the sea. They lifted up the boats and passed them from hand
to hand without any effort, shouting with joy.
While these chiefs were
going up to Waolani, Ke-ao-mele-mele came from Hawaii in her cloud
boats.
Kane had told the menehunes
to prepare houses quickly for her. It was done like the motion of the
eye.
Ke-ao-mele-mele entered her
house, rested, and after a time practised the hula.
The chiefs also had houses
prepared, which they entered.
The shell boats found
difficulty in entering the bay because the other boats were in the way.
So they turned off to the eastern side of the harbor. Thus the ancient
name of that side was given Ke-awa-lua (the second harbor, or the second
landing-place in the harbor). Here they landed very quietly. The shell
boats became very small and Kau-lana and her companions took them and
hid them in their clothes. They went along the beach, saw some fish. The
attendants took them for the girl. This gave the name Kau-lana-iki-pokii
to that place to this day. As they went along, the dragon friend made
the signs of a high chief appear over the girl. The red rain and arching
bow were over her, so the name was given to that place, Ka-ua-koko-ula
(blood rain), which is the name to this day.
The dragon changed her body
and carried the girl up Nuuanu Valley very swiftly to the house of
Ke-ao-mele-mele (the maiden of the golden cloud) without the knowledge
of Kane and the others. They heard the hula of Ke-ao-mele-mele. Soon she
felt that some one was outside, and looking saw the girl and her friend,
with the signs of a chief cover her.
So she called:
"Is that you, O eye of the day?
O lightning-like eye from Kahiki,
The remembered one coming to me.
The strong winds have been blowing,
Trembling comes into my breast,
A stranger perhaps is outside,
A woman whose sign is the fog,
A stranger and yet my young sister,
The flower of the divine home-land,
The wonderful land of the setting sun
Going down into the deep blue sea.
You belong to the white ocean of Kane,
You are Kau-lana-iki-pokii,
The daughter of the sunset,
The woman coming in the mist,
In the thunder and the flash of lightning
Quivering in the sky above.
Light falls on the earth below.
The sign of the chiefess,
The woman high up in the heavens,
Kau-lana-iki-pokii,
Enter, enter, here am I."
Those outside heard the call
and understood that Ke-ao-mele-mele knew who they were. They entered and
saw her in all the beauty of her high divine Wood.
They kissed. Kau-lana told
how she had come. Ke-ao-mele-mele told the dragon to go and stay on the
mountain by the broken pali at the head of Nuuanu Valley. So she went to
the precipice and became the watchman of that place. She was the first
dragon on the islands. She watched with magic power. Later, Mo-o-inanea
came with many dragons to watch over the islands. Ke-ao-mele-mele taught
her young sister the different hulas and meles, so that they were both
alike in their power.
When the young men heard
hula voices in the other houses they thought they would go and see the
dancers. At the hour of twilight Waolani shook as if in an earthquake,
and there was thunder and lightning.
The young men and Anuenue
went to the house and saw the girls dancing, and wondered how Kau-lana
had come from the far-off land.
Ke-ao-mele-mele foretold the
future for the young people. She told Kau-lana that she would never
marry, but should have magic medicine power for all coming days, and
Kahanai should have the power over all customs of priests and sorcerers
and knowledge of sacrifices, and should be the bosom friend of the
medicine-goddess. She said that they would all go to Waipio, Hawaii.
Kane, Kanaloa, and Anuenue approved of her commands.
Ke-ao-mele-mele sent
Kau-lana to Hawaii to tell Paliula to come and live with them at Waipio
and find Kahanai once more. Kau-lana hastened to Hawaii in her shell
boat. She called, "O my red shell boat of the deep blue sea and the
black sea, come up to me."
The shell boat appeared on
the surface of the sea, floating. The girl was carried swiftly to
Hawaii. There she found Waka and Paliula and took them to Waipio. They
lived for a time there, then all went to Waolani to complete the
marriage of Ke-ao-mele-mele to Kau-mai-liula.
Kane sent Waka and Anuenue
for Ku and Hiilei, Hina and Olopana with Mo-o-inanea to come to Oahu.
Mo-o-inanea prepared large
ocean-going canoes for the two families, but she and her people went in
their magic boats.
Mo-o-inanea told them they
would never return to these lands, but should find their future home in
Hawaii.
Waka went on Ku's boat,
Anuenue was with Hina. Ku and his friends looked back, the land was
almost lost; they soon saw nothing until the mountains of Oahu appeared
before them.
They landed at Heeia on the
northern side of the Nuuanu precipice, went over to Waolani, and met all
the family who had come before.
Before Mo-o-inanea left her
land she changed it, shutting up all the places where her family had
lived. She told all her kupua dragon family to come with her to the
place where the gods had gone. Thus she made the old lands entirely
different from any other lands, so that no other persons but gods or
ghosts could live in them.
Then she rose up to come
away. The land was covered with rainclouds, heavy and black. The land
disappeared and is now known as "The Hidden Land of Kane."
She landed on Western Oahu,
at Waialua, so that place became the home of the dragons, and it was
filled with the dragons from Waialua to Ewa.
This was the coming of
dragons to the Hawaiian Islands.
At the time of the marriage
of Ke-ao-mele-mele and Kau-mai-liula, the Beautiful Daughter of Sunset
came from the island Hawaii bringing the two trees Makalei and Makuukao,
which prepared cooked food and fish. When she heard the call to the
marriage she came with the trees. Makalei brought great multitudes of
fish from all the ocean to the Koo-lau-poko side of the island Oahu. The
ocean was red with the fish.
Makuukao came to Nuuanu
Valley with Kau-lana, entered Waolani, and provided plenty of food.
Then Makalei started to come
up from the sea.
Kau-lana-iki-pokii told the
gods and people that there must not be any noise when that great tree
came up from the sea. They must hear and remain silent.
When the tree began to come
to the foot of the pali, the menehunes and eepas were astonished and
began to shout with a great voice, for they thought this was a mighty
kupua from Kahiki coming to destroy them.
When they had shouted,
Makalei fell down at the foot of the pali near Ka-wai-nui, and lies
there to this day. So this tree never came to Waolani and the fish were
scattered around the island.
Kau-lana's wrath was very
great, and he told Kane and the others to punish these noisy ones, to
take them away from this wonderful valley of the gods. He said, "No
family of these must dwell on Waolani." Thus the fairies and the gnomes
were driven away and scattered over the islands.
For a long time the Maiden
of the Golden Cloud and her husband, Twilight Resting in the Sky, ruled
over all the islands even to the mysterious lands of the ocean. When
death came they laid aside their human bodies and never made use of them
again-but as aumakuas, or ghost-gods, they assumed their divine forms,
and in the skies, over the mountains and valleys, they have appeared for
hundreds of years watching over and cheering their descendants.
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