ACCORDING to Hawaiian myth, Pele, the volcanic
fire-queen and the chief architect of the Hawaiian
group, was a foreigner, born in the mystical land of
Kuai-he-lani, a land not rooted and anchored to one
spot, but that floated free like the Fata Morgana, and that showed
itself at times to the eyes of mystics, poets and seers, a garden
land, clad with the living glory of trees and habitations a vision
to warm the imagination.
The region was known as Kahiki (Kukulu o Kahiki), a name that connotes Java and that is asso- ciated with the Asiatic cradle of the Polynesian race. Pele's mother was Haumea, a name that crops up as an ances- tor in the hoary antiquity of the Hawaiian people, and she was reputed to be the daughter of Kane-hoa-lani.....
Read more PELE AND HIIAKA A Myth From Hawaii BY NATHANIEL B. EMERSON, A. M., M. D. HONOLULU, HAWAII Author of The Long Voyages of the Ancient Hawaiians, and of Unwritten Literature of Hawaii, Translator of David Male's Hawaiian Antiquities
The region was known as Kahiki (Kukulu o Kahiki), a name that connotes Java and that is asso- ciated with the Asiatic cradle of the Polynesian race. Pele's mother was Haumea, a name that crops up as an ances- tor in the hoary antiquity of the Hawaiian people, and she was reputed to be the daughter of Kane-hoa-lani.....
Read more PELE AND HIIAKA A Myth From Hawaii BY NATHANIEL B. EMERSON, A. M., M. D. HONOLULU, HAWAII Author of The Long Voyages of the Ancient Hawaiians, and of Unwritten Literature of Hawaii, Translator of David Male's Hawaiian Antiquities
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