[8] Pe’ape’a, a bat; a creature regarded as a kupua. [↑]
[9] Ka-upu, some sort of a sea-gull. [↑]
[10] Lu-ahi, the object of a person’s wrath or indignation. [↑]
[11] Hika’a-lani, facing heaven; looking up to heaven. This was the name given later to a beautiful princess on Oahu. [↑]
[12] Ma-u, literally, damp; the name of the wife of Maka-li’i, as here indicated. Maka-li’i, here used as the name of a deity, is also, 1. the name of the Pleiades; 2. the name of the month in which that constellation rises at the time of sunset; 3. the name sometimes applied to the six summer months collectively. The visible sign of Maka-li’i, as a deity or kupua, was a rain-cloud. [↑]
[13] Awa i-ku, awa i-lani. A clear understanding of these words calls for a reference to the customs, that had almost the dignity of a rite, that were observed in the handling of awa for purposes of worship, or as an offering to the gods. This began with the very digging of the awa root. He who did this had first to purify himself by a bath in the ocean, followed by an ablution in fresh water and completing the lustration with an aspersion of water containing turmeric, administered by a priest. Then, having arrayed himself in a clean malo, he knelt with both knees upon the ground and tore the root from its bed. Now, rising to his feet, he lifted the awa root to heaven, and by this act the awa was dignified and was called awa i-ku. The utterance (by the priest?) of the kanaenae, or prayer of consecration and eulogy, still further enhanced this dignity and set it apart as a special sacrifice to some god, or to the gods of some class. Awa thus consecrated was known as awa i-lani. [↑]
[14] Mauli-ola, the God of Health; also the name of a place. The same name was applied also to the breath of life, and to the kahuna’s power of healing. In the Maori tongue the word mauri means life, the seat of life. In Samoan mauli means heart; in Hawaiian it means to faint. “Sneeze, living heart” (“Tihe, mauri ora”), says the New Zealand mother to her infant when it utters a sneeze. The Hawaiian mother makes the same ejaculation. [↑]
[15] Ka-ulu-ola. I can throw no light on this phrase further than is to be obtained in the above note. [↑]
[16] Kapu-kapu-kai. Awa was forbidden to women. Under certain circumstances, however, it was set before them. In such a case the tabu was first removed by sprinkling the root with sea water (kapu-kai). [↑]