She was not forgotten, for Ma-ui Mua, her eldest brother, thought of her. In Kahiki-mo-e they tell of his search for her, and they say that when he [[40]]heard of her casting herself into the sea, he took to his canoe and went searching all over the sea for her. He found new Islands, Islands that no one had ever been on before, and he went from Island to Island, ever hoping to find Hina-of-the-Sea. Far, far he went, and he found neither his sister nor any one who knew about her.

“The houses of Lima Loa stand,

But there are no people;

They are at Mana.”

And every day Hina-of-the-Sea would go down to the shore of the land she was on, and she would call on her eldest brother:

“O Lu-pe! Come over!

Take me and my child!”

Now one day, as Hina cried out on the beach, there came a canoe towards her. There was a man in the canoe; but Hina, hardly noticing him, still cried to the waves and the winds:

“O Lu-pe! Come over!

Take me and my child!”