Hawaiian folk tales
Hawaiian Folk Tales
Hawaiian Girl of the Old Régime.
Copyright, 1907
A. C. McClurg & Co.
Entered at Stationers’ Hall, London, England
Published March 1, 1907
The Lakeside Press R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company Chicago
It is becoming more and more a matter of regret that a larger amount of systematic effort was not established in early years for the gathering and preservation of the folk-lore of the Hawaiians. The world is under lasting obligations to the late Judge Fornander, and to Dr. Rae before him, for their painstaking efforts to gather the history of this people and trace their origin and migrations; but Fornander’s work only has seen the light, Dr. Rae’s manuscript having been accidentally destroyed by fire.
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Preface
Note
Contents
Illustrations
I.—Snaring the Sun
II.—The Origin of Fire
Location of the Lua o Milu
Part I
Part II
Part III
Moke Manu’s Account
Pi’s Watercourse
Laka’s Adventure
Kekupua’s Canoe
As Heiau Builders
Deified Fish Superstition
Story of the Anae-holo
Myth of the Hilu
The Hou, or Snoring Fish
Glossary of Hawaiian Words
Hawaiian Yesterdays