Wela ka ulu o Hawaii;
Kakala wela aku la Kahiki ia Olopana, [189]
Ka’u wahi kanaka;
O ka hei kapu [190] o Hana-ka-ulani, [191]
Ka hei kapu a ke alii,
Ka hoo-mamao-lani, [192]
Ke kapu o Keawe, [193]
A o Keawe
Ke alii holo, ho-i’a i kai, e-e!
Footnote 189:[ (return) ] Olopana. A celebrated king of Waipio valley, Hawaii, who had to wife the famous beauty, Luukia. Owing to misfortune, he sailed away to Kahiki, taking with him his wife and his younger brother, Moikeha, who was his puna-lua, settling in a land called Moa-ula-nui-akea. Olopana probably ended his days in his new-found home, but Moi-keha, heart-sick at the loss of Luukia’s favors, came hack to Hawaii and became the progenitor of a line of distinguished men, several of whom were famous navigators. Exactly what incident in the life of Olopana is alluded to in the sixth and preceding verses, the traditions that narrate his adventures do not inform us.