Legends of Ma-ui—a demi god of Polynesia, and of his mother Hina

Legends of Ma-ui—a demi god of Polynesia, and of his mother Hina

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Legends of Ma-ui—a demi god of Polynesia, and of his mother Hina by W. D. Westervelt

Published:

1910

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971

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Legends of Ma-ui—a demi god of Polynesia, and of his mother Hina

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Book Excerpt

lava across the stream below the falls. The rising water was fast filling the cave.

Hina called loudly to her powerful son Maui. He came quickly and found that a large and strong ridge of lava lay across the stream. One end rested against a small hill. Maui struck the rock on the other side of the hill and thus broke a new pathway for the river. The water swiftly flowed away and the cave remained as the home of the Maui family.

According to the King Kalakaua family legend, translated by Queen Liliuokalani, Maui and his brothers also made this place their home. Here he aroused the anger of two uncles, his mother's brothers, who were called "Tall Post" and "Short Post," because they guarded the entrance to a cave in which the Maui family probably had its home.

"They fought hard with Maui, and were thrown, and red water flowed freely from Maui's forehead. This was the first shower by Maui." Perhaps some family discipline followed this knocking down of door posts, for it is said:

"The