登陆注册
26292200000035

第35章 THE WATER BABY(1)

I lent a weary ear to old Kohokumu's interminable chanting of the deeds and adventures of Maui, the Promethean demi-god of Polynesia who fished up dry land from ocean depths with hooks made fast to heaven, who lifted up the sky whereunder previously men had gone on all-fours, not having space to stand erect, and who made the sun with its sixteen snared legs stand still and agree thereafter to traverse the sky more slowly--the sun being evidently a trade unionist and believing in the six-hour day, while Maui stood for the open shop and the twelve-hour day.

"Now this," said Kohokumu, "is from Queen Lililuokalani's own family mele:

"Maui became restless and fought the sun With a noose that he laid.

And winter won the sun, And summer was won by Maui . . . "

Born in the Islands myself, I knew the Hawaiian myths better than this old fisherman, although I possessed not his memorization that enabled him to recite them endless hours.

"And you believe all this?" I demanded in the sweet Hawaiian tongue.

"It was a long time ago," he pondered. "I never saw Maui with my own eyes. But all our old men from all the way back tell us these things, as I, an old man, tell them to my sons and grandsons, who will tell them to their sons and grandsons all the way ahead to come."

"You believe," I persisted, "that whopper of Maui roping the sun like a wild steer, and that other whopper of heaving up the sky from off the earth?"

"I am of little worth, and am not wise, O Lakana," my fisherman made answer. "Yet have I read the Hawaiian Bible the missionaries translated to us, and there have I read that your Big Man of the Beginning made the earth, and sky, and sun, and moon, and stars, and all manner of animals from horses to cockroaches and from centipedes and mosquitoes to sea lice and jellyfish, and man and woman, and everything, and all in six days. Why, Maui didn't do anything like that much. He didn't make anything. He just put things in order, that was all, and it took him a long, long time to make the improvements. And anyway, it is much easier and more reasonable to believe the little whopper than the big whopper."

And what could I reply? He had me on the matter of reasonableness.

Besides, my head ached. And the funny thing, as I admitted it to myself, was that evolution teaches in no uncertain voice that man did run on all-fours ere he came to walk upright, that astronomy states flatly that the speed of the revolution of the earth on its axis has diminished steadily, thus increasing the length of day, and that the seismologists accept that all the islands of Hawaii were elevated from the ocean floor by volcanic action.

Fortunately, I saw a bamboo pole, floating on the surface several hundred feet away, suddenly up-end and start a very devil's dance.

This was a diversion from the profitless discussion, and Kohokumu and I dipped our paddles and raced the little outrigger canoe to the dancing pole. Kohokumu caught the line that was fast to the butt of the pole and under-handed it in until a two-foot ukikiki, battling fiercely to the end, flashed its wet silver in the sun and began beating a tattoo on the inside bottom of the canoe. Kohokumu picked up a squirming, slimy squid, with his teeth bit a chunk of live bait out of it, attached the bait to the hook, and dropped line and sinker overside. The stick floated flat on the surface of the water, and the canoe drifted slowly away. With a survey of the crescent composed of a score of such sticks all lying flat, Kohokumu wiped his hands on his naked sides and lifted the wearisome and centuries-old chant of Kuali:

"Oh, the great fish-hook of Maui!

Manai-i-ka-lani--"made fast to the heavens"!

An earth-twisted cord ties the hook, Engulfed from lofty Kauiki!

Its bait the red-billed Alae, The bird to Hina sacred!

It sinks far down to Hawaii, Struggling and in pain dying!

Caught is the land beneath the water, Floated up, up to the surface, But Hina hid a wing of the bird And broke the land beneath the water!

Below was the bait snatched away And eaten at once by the fishes, The Ulua of the deep muddy places!

His aged voice was hoarse and scratchy from the drinking of too much swipes at a funeral the night before, nothing of which contributed to make me less irritable. My head ached. The sun-glare on the water made my eyes ache, while I was suffering more than half a touch of mal de mer from the antic conduct of the outrigger on the blobby sea. The air was stagnant. In the lee of Waihee, between the white beach and the roof, no whisper of breeze eased the still sultriness. I really think I was too miserable to summon the resolution to give up the fishing and go in to shore.

Lying back with closed eyes, I lost count of time. I even forgot that Kohokumu was chanting till reminded of it by his ceasing. An exclamation made me bare my eyes to the stab of the sun. He was gazing down through the water-glass.

"It's a big one," he said, passing me the device and slipping over-side feet-first into the water.

He went under without splash and ripple, turned over and swam down.

I followed his progress through the water-glass, which is merely an oblong box a couple of feet long, open at the top, the bottom sealed water-tight with a sheet of ordinary glass.

Now Kohokumu was a bore, and I was squeamishly out of sorts with him for his volubleness, but I could not help admiring him as I watched him go down. Past seventy years of age, lean as a toothpick, and shrivelled like a mummy, he was doing what few young athletes of my race would do or could do. It was forty feet to bottom. There, partly exposed, but mostly hidden under the bulge of a coral lump, I could discern his objective. His keen eyes had caught the projecting tentacle of a squid. Even as he swam, the tentacle was lazily withdrawn, so that there was no sign of the creature. But the brief exposure of the portion of one tentacle had advertised its owner as a squid of size.

同类推荐
  • 谷风之什

    谷风之什

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 真心直说

    真心直说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 律戒本疏

    律戒本疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Aspern Papers

    The Aspern Papers

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 后汉演义

    后汉演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 影后很忙

    影后很忙

    十年之后,谢珺妍已是娱乐圈知名的女星。背靠大树,影后只离她一步之遥。而十年之前的苦涩回忆将随着某人的归来,重起波澜。————————————————————————————(本文以娱乐圈为皮,实则不过是平淡言情。要看勾心斗角的亲们慎入。)
  • 傲视七界

    傲视七界

    一个被粒子炮弹轰到异界的儿童,一个稀里糊涂成为主神的少年,一个肩负着光复雷蒙的黑暗重任,而他,却又在机缘巧合之下成为雷蒙的主宰!这一切与我何干,我只是一个想要回到地球的浪子!只是,现实却不能与你没有关联,因为你就是传说。
  • 无良史集之秦始皇

    无良史集之秦始皇

    战国之世,礼崩乐坏,瓦釜雷鸣,兵戈不休,士民罢弊。外有北地诸胡控弦狼顾,内有六国百姓血仇难消。欲攘外而先安内,兄弟阋墙而不能外御其辱,虽多举于无奈,终乃华夏最为不齿之陋习!学蛆赵政,穿越千载,附身少年秦王。不通兵法,未读刑律,唯晓商贸金融。幽禁太后以清宫室,贬谪吕相而收王权。虽倚百万秦军,却不轻举兵戈;据关中巴蜀,重农工,兴商贸,依金融以制六合。虚囹圄而免刑戮,发仓廪而散财币,轻赋少事以佐百姓之急,德与万民乃使天下大息。中原既定,北驱匈奴,西击月氏,南取百越,东出沧海。丝绸之路,黄金海岸,兵锋所及之处,秦商垄断商贸,独揽金融。犯我强秦者,虽远“币铢”!
  • 恶魔道士

    恶魔道士

    他是一个恶魔但也是一个道士,他的眼瞳看的只有失去,但是他为爱而战斗……
  • 快穿之让男主爱上我

    快穿之让男主爱上我

    “不是说死了不是上天堂就是下地狱吗?我这是在哪啊?”某二货看着这鸟语花香的地方!“是我把你弄来这里的,我需要你来替我完成任务”“我不要”某二货傲娇中。“是吗”腹黑系统开启诱拐模式“可以去各个位面看美男,吃美食,有着无尽的生命”“是吗?”意志松动中。“当然了,而且完成后还可以满足I你的一个愿望哦”“我要我要,我答应你”作者君:无语,骚年你的高冷呢?你的节操呢?某二货一挥手:被狗吃了!在说我都死了,还要那玩意咋。作者君:骚年好像你生前也没有吧!某二货恼羞成怒:看透别说透,否则我们友谊的巨轮就要沉没!这是一个普通的女高中生遭遇腹黑系统,穿越多个位面攻略男主的故事
  • 浔浔觅觅

    浔浔觅觅

    仙会杀人吗,会魔会救人吗,会哪为什么仙会得到得到尊重和崇拜,魔只会被厌恶和唾弃。因为仙代表光,魔代表暗,世人往往向往光明害怕黑暗。"你不像只魔。""你也不像位仙。"
  • 来世浅笑

    来世浅笑

    总认为,有些东西,是不顾时间,不顾空间的。不曾改变。这种信念,亦或是执念,很早便在我心中生根,发芽,不枯不萎,不离不弃。他像是我生命中最重要的部分,等我不断,不断,向前,追求。于是,花开了。但最后的最后,梦碎了。于是,花落了。那一年,狼烟四起,亡国的号角吹响了整个君国,这,也许是我人生中最痛苦的回忆吧!我叫沐浅笑,君国的最后一位公主,母后给我起这个名字的时候,就希望我天天开心,天天笑,生在乱世之中,又有谁,可以这般无邪的笑……直到遇到了他,云国的唯一太子云亦冰,这个名字一直刻在了我的脑海中,让我永世不忘。回忆转眼而过,我也该感谢上苍给我这份迟来的爱,但是为什么一切都如此短暂……
  • 失忆王妃再嫁

    失忆王妃再嫁

    堂堂尚书千金,本该成为太子妃的,却一朝祸起,失去记忆,更被人怀疑失了清白?四国勾心斗角,天下大势,关她小女子何事?居然还派她为和亲公主,这个幕后的黑手,最好不要让她找到,否则,哼,她一定不会轻饶他!
  • 宫斗一锅炖

    宫斗一锅炖

    开新书了,《快穿系统:宿主总在黑化》新号写的,求支持一群穿越女的宫斗生活,也不知道造了什么孽,一穿就成了别人家的皇后,这也就算了,瞧瞧她都发现了些什么?原来这宫里大多都是老乡啊,但是你一个腹黑的萝莉我忍了,一个冷血的杀手我也忍了,一朵患有被爱狂想症的小白花我也忍了,关键是人家穿越带重生怎么破?穿越带系统怎么破?穿越带空间怎么破?还要不要人混了摔?白莲花,腹黑女,冷血杀手,富家千金谁是你的最爱?
  • 杀向神庭

    杀向神庭

    一本《升仙笔录》引发的血案。修仙到底是修的什么?