Kaala and Kaaialii - A Legend of Lanai (Part I)
W. M. Gibson
Bordering upon the land of Kealia, on the southwest coast of Lanai, where was pahonua or place of refuge, are the remains of Kaunolu, an ancient heiau, or temple. Its ruins lie within the mouth of a deep ravine, whose extending banks run out into the sea and form a bold,
bluff-bound bay. On the top of the western bank there is a stone-paved platform, called the kuaha. Outside of this, and separated by a narrow alley-way, there runs a broad high wall, which quite encircles the kuaha. Other
walls and structures lead down the bank, and the slope is terraced and paved down to the tide-worn stones of the shore.
At the beach there is a break; a great block of the bluff has been rent away by some convulsion of nature, and stands out
like a lone tower, divided from the main by a gulf of the sea. Its high walls beetle from their tops, upon which neither man
nor goat can climb. But you can behold on the flat summit of this islet bluff, portions of ancient work, of altars and walls,
and no doubt part of the mainland temple, to which this fragment once was joined. But man can
visit this lone tower’s top no more, and his feet can never climb its overhanging walls.
Inland from the temple there are many remains of the huts of the people of the past. The stone foundations, the inclosures
for swine, the round earth ovens, and other traces of a throng of people cover many acres of beach and hillside. This was
a town famed as an abode of gods and a refuge for those who fled for their lives; but it drew its people mainly through the
fame of its fishing-ground, which swarmed with the varied life of the Hawaiian seas.
To this famed fishing-ground came the great hero of Hawaii to tax the deep, when he had subdued this and the other isles.
He came with his fleets of war canoes; with his faithful koas, or fighting men, with his chiefs, and priests, and women, and their trains. He had a house here. Upon the craggy bluff that
forms the eastern bank of the bay there is a lonely pa, or wall, and stones of an ancient fort, overlooking the temple, town, and bay.
Kamehameha came to Kealia for sport rather than for worship. Who so loved to throw the maika ball, or hurl the spear, or thrust
aside the many javelins flung at his naked chest, as the chief of Kohala? He rode gladly on the crest of the surf waves. He
delighted to drive his canoe alone out into the storm. He fought with the monsters of the deep, as well as with men. He captured
the great shark that abounds in the bay, and he would clutch in the fearful grip of his hands the deadly eel or snake of these
seas, the terror of fishes and men.
When this warrior king came to Kaunolu, the islanders thronged to the shore to pay homage to the great chief, and to lay at
the feet of their sovereign, as was their wont, the products of the isle: the taro, the yam, the hala, the cocoanut, ohelo,
banana, and sweet potato. They piled up a mound of food before the door of the King’s pakui, along with a clamorous multitude
of fat poi-fed dogs, and of fathom-long swine.
Besides this tribute of the men, the workers of the land, the women filled the air with the sweet odors of their floral offerings.
The maidens were twined from head to waist with leis or wreaths of the na-u, which is Lanai’s own lovely jessamine—a rare gardenia, whose sweet aroma loads the breeze, and leads you to the bush when
seeking it afar off. These garlands were fastened to the plaited pili thatch of the King’s pakui; they were placed on the
necks of the young warriors, who stood around the chief; and around his royal brows they twined an odorous crown of maile.
The Ceremony of the Hula.
The brightest of the girlish throng who stood before the dread Lord of the Isles was Kaala, or Sweet Scented, whose fifteen
suns had just burnished her sweet brown face with a soft golden gloss; and her large, round, tender eyes knew yet no wilting
fires. Her neck and arms, and all of her young body not covered by the leafy pa-u, was tinted with a soft sheen like unto
a rising moon. Her skin glowed with the glory of youth, and mingled its delicate odor of health with the blooms of the groves,
so that the perfume of her presence received fittingly the name of Fragrance.
In those rude days the island race was sound and clean. The supple round limbs were made bright and strong by the constant
bath and the temperate breeze. They were not cumbered with clothing; they wore no long, sweating gowns, but their smooth,
shining skins reflected back their sun, which gave them such a rich and dusky charm.
Perhaps such a race cannot long wear all our gear and live. They are best clothed with sea foam, or with the garlands of their
groves. How sweetly blend the brown and green; and when young, soft, amber-tinted cheeks, glowing with the crimson tide beneath,
are wreathed with the odorous evergreens of the isles, you see the poesy of our kind, and the sweet, wild grace that dwelt in the Eden Paradise.
The sweet Kaala stood mindless of harm, as the playful breeze rustled the long blades of the la-i (dracæna) leaves, hanging like a bundle of green swords from her waist; and as they twirled and fluttered in the air, revealed the
soft, rounded form, whose charm filled the eye and heart of one who stood among the braves of the great chief—the heart of the stout young warrior Kaaialii.
This youth had fought in the battle of Maunalei, Lanai’s last bloody fight. With his long-reaching spear, wielded with sinewy
arms, he urged the flying foe to the top of a fearful cliff, and mocking the cries of a huddled crowd of panic-scared men,
drove them with thrusts and shouts till they leaped like frightened sheep into the jaws of the deep, dark chasm, and their
torn corpses strewed the jagged stones below.
Kaaialii, like many a butcher of his kind, was comely to see. With the lion’s heart, he had the lion’s tawny hue. A swart
grace beamed beneath his curling brows. He had the small, firm hand to throttle or caress, and eyes full of fire for hate
or love; and love’s flame now lit the face of the hero of the bloody leap, and to his great chief he said, “O King of all
the isles, let this sweet flower be mine, rather than the valley thou gavest me for my domain.”
Said Kamehameha: “You shall plant the Lanai jessamine in the valley I gave you in Kohala. But there is another who claims
our daughter, who is the stout bone-breaker, the scarred Mailou. My spearman of Maunalei can have no fear; and you shall wrestle
with him; and let the one whose arms can clasp the girl after the fight carry her to his house, where one kapa shall cover the two.”
The poor maid, the careless gift of savage power, held up her clasped hands with a frightened gesture at the dread name of
the breaker of bones; for she had heard how he had sucked the breath of many a dainty bloom like her, then crunched the wilted
blossom with sinews of hate, and flung it to the sharks.
And the Lanai maiden loved the young chief of Hawaii. He had indeed pierced her people, but only the tender darts of his eyes
had wounded her. Turning to him, she looked her savage, quick, young love, and said, “O Kaaialii, may thy grip be as sure
as thy thrust. Save me from the bloody virgin-eater, and I will catch the squid and beat the kapa for thee all my days.”
The time of contest approached. The King sat under the shade of a leafy kou, the royal tree of the olden time, which has faded away with the chiefs it once did shelter. On the smooth shell floor, covered
with the hala mat, stood the bare-limbed braves, stripped to the malo, who with hot eyes of hate shot out their rage of lust
and blood, and stretched out their strangling arms. They stood, beating with heavy fists their broad, glossy chests of bronze,
and grinning face to face, they glowered their savage wish to kill. Then, with right foot advanced, and right arm uplifted,
they pause to shout their gage of battle, and tell to each how they would maim and tear, and kill, and give each other’s flesh for food to some beastly maw.
And now, each drawing near to each, with arms uplifted, and outspread palms with sinewy play, like nervy claws trying to clutch
or grip, they seek a chance for a deadly clinch. And swift the scarred child-strangler has sprung with his right to the young
spear-man’s throat, who as quickly hooks the lunging arm within the crook of his, and with quick, sledge-like blow breaks the shoulder arm-bone.
With fury the baffled bone-breaker grips with the uncrippled hand; but now two stout young arms, tense with rage, soon twist
and break the one unaided limb. Then with limp arms the beaten brute turns to flee; but swift hate is upon him, and clutches
him by the throat; and pressing him down, the hero of Kaala holds his knee to the hapless wretch’s back, and with knee bored
into the backward bended spine, he strains and jerks till the jointed bones snap and break, and the dread throttler of girls and babes lies prone on the mat, a broken
and bloody corpse.
“Good!” cried the King. “Our son has the strength of Kanekoa. Now let our daughter soothe the limbs of her lover. Let her
stroke his skin, press his joints, and knead his back with the loving grip and touch of the lomilomi. We will have a great
bake, with the hula and song; and when the feast is over, then shall they be one.”
A line of women squat down. They crone their wild refrain, praising the one who wins in strife and love. They seize in their
right hand the hula gourd, clattering with pebbles inside. They whirl it aloft, they shake, they swing, they strike their
palms, they thump the mat; and now with supple joints they twirl their loins, and with heave and twist, and with swing and
song, the savage dance goes on.