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Island Love On The Pacific
The Helen Of Hawaii
Henry Theophilus Finck
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       _ As there was practically no difference between married and unmarried women in Hawaii, it is not strange that cases of abduction of wives should have occurred. The following story, related in Kalakana's book, probably suffered no great change at the hands of the recorder. I give a condensed version of it:
       In the twelfth century, the close of the second era of
       migration from Tahiti and Samoa, there lived a girl
       named Hina, noted as the most beautiful maiden on the
       islands. She married the chief Hakalanileo, and had two
       children by him. Reports of her beauty had excited the
       fancy of Kaupeepee, the chief of Haupu. He went to test
       the reports with his own eyes, and saw that they were
       not exaggerated. So he hovered around the coast of Hilo
       watching for a chance to abduct her. It came at last.
       One day, after sunset, when the moon was shining, Hina
       repaired to the beach with her women to take a bath. A
       signal was given--it is thought by the first wife of
       Hina's husband--and, not long after, a light but
       heavily manned canoe dashed through the surf and shot
       in among the bathers. The women screamed and started
       for the shore. Suddenly a man leaped from the canoe
       into the water. There was a brief struggle, a stifled
       scream, a sharp word of command, and a moment later
       Kaupeepee was again in the canoe with the nude and
       frantic Hina in his arms. The boatmen lost no time to
       start; they rowed all night and in the morning reach
       Haupu.
       Hina had been wrapped in folds of soft _kapa_, and she
       spent the night sobbing, not knowing what was to become
       of her. When shore was reached she was borne to the
       captor's fortress and given an apartment provided with
       every luxury. She fell asleep from fatigue, and when
       she awoke and realized where she was it was not without
       a certain feeling of pride that she reflected that her
       beauty had led the famous and mighty Kaupeepee to
       abduct her.
       After partaking of a hearty breakfast, she sent for him
       and he came promptly. "What can I do for you ?" he
       asked. "Liberate me!" was her answer. "Return me to my
       children!" "Impossible!" was the firm reply. "Then kill
       me," she exclaimed. The chief now told her how he had
       left home specially to see her, and found her the most
       beautiful woman in Hawaii. He had risked his life to
       get her. "You are my prisoner," he said, "but not more
       than I am yours. You shall leave Haupu only when its
       walls shall have been battered down and I lie dead
       among the ruins."
       Hina saw that resistance was useless. He had soothed
       her with flattery; he was a great noble; he was gentle
       though brave. "How strangely pleasant are his words and
       voice," she said to herself. "No one ever spoke so to
       me before. I could have listened longer." After that
       she hearkened for his footsteps and soon accepted him
       as her lover and spouse.
       For seventeen years she remained a willing prisoner. In
       the meantime her two sons by her first husband had
       grown up; they ascertained where their mother was,
       demanded her release, and on refusal waged a terrible
       war which at last ended in the death of Kaupeepee and
       the destruction of his walls. _