This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
29383 | of its commercial relations with its neighbor? |
18931 | Ashes, in layers having the same slope as the surface, extended over it, proving the post(?) |
29773 | Do you mean to tell me that my power is less than Hina Keahi''s? |
29773 | Do you think that I, Hina Kuluua, can not do as much for my people in their time of need? 29773 Make a rope,"queried another,"how can we do that?" |
29773 | Ca n''t you see the waters above here are high? |
29773 | How did you learn?" |
29773 | Ignoring the spirit of their intent in absenting themselves from their post of duty, the king demanded:"But where is my canoe? |
29773 | What have you done with my canoe? |
26501 | Is it not a thing which we ought to feel as a disgrace-- a custom that reflects upon the heads of the old and the hearts of the young? |
26501 | Is that as it should be? |
26501 | Where amongst us shall we find the numberless drawbacks which in less favored countries the working classes have to contend with? |
26501 | Would not darkness become light? |
26501 | Would not ignorance give way to intelligence? |
26501 | Would not inexpertness succumb to proficiency? |
45049 | But how do they cook? |
45049 | Among what people could they have saved more souls? |
45049 | But can any one, who understands this work, wonder that a man who felt thus should lose the Spirit and apostatize? |
45049 | But what must the rest do? |
45049 | But who were to be partners, and how should we decide which island each couple should go to? |
45049 | How do you think such differences of views and opinions can be settled? |
45049 | How far did the obedience which we owed to him require us to go? |
45049 | I often asked myself, after hearing of his death, would it not have been better for him if he had remained? |
45049 | If God be with us who can be against us? |
45049 | In what position could the sons of King Mosiah have learned as much concerning the power of God as they did during their missions among the Lamanites? |
45049 | Scatter among the other islands, or remain on that island-- Oahu-- until they learned more of the condition of affairs? |
45049 | The next thing was to select partners and islands; and how do you think we did this? |
45049 | The question arose directly,"Shall we confine our labors to the white people?" |
45049 | We had been in the presence of the Lord, and had felt His power, and why should we not be happy? |
45049 | We had done but little at warning the people, or accomplishing our mission, and why leave them then, any more than on the first day that we landed? |
45049 | What were my petty difficulties compared with those afflictions which they had to endure? |
45049 | What were we to do? |
61148 | But why did he take them? |
61148 | Child of the gods,he said,"shall I speak my_ manao_?" |
61148 | Father, why civil war? |
61148 | My Lord of Kohala,inquired Aelani,"how many spearmen can you have at daylight to- morrow morning, with provisions to cross the mountains?" |
61148 | Who found her? 61148 Who is your wife? |
61148 | And how could he be of the sacred race which the gods had sent from heaven to rule men? |
61148 | But why do you come-- a vision to me-- oh, goddess? |
61148 | Had it not proved true? |
61148 | How, then, could her claimant to the throne enjoy Ku''s favor? |
61148 | Most convincing of all, would Ku have permitted her to live if she had committed damning sin? |
61148 | The next day Papaakahi went to her again and asked her,"My daughter, have you considered well?" |
61148 | Was she not now with them in living flesh and blood? |
61148 | Where did these people, so remote and isolated, get this and so many other of the customs described in the Jewish scriptures? |
61148 | Who in all the land did not? |
61148 | Who picked her up?" |
61148 | Who was her mother?" |
61148 | Why can not I marry him?" |
61148 | Why should he restrain them? |
61148 | Why should not he do it? |
61148 | Why should you die? |
61148 | Yet who should take up arms against the Lord of Life and Death, vice- gerent of Ku? |
61148 | You can be a good girl and marry your brother without being cold to your lover, ca n''t you,_ keike_?" |
41451 | Are they spoiled by living with Americans? |
41451 | But if they do n''t take tips, do they get good wages? |
41451 | How about their amusements? |
41451 | Will you answer this letter for me? 41451 Would you expect,"he says,"to find in that awful leper settlement a custom worthy of transplanting to your own country? |
41451 | ''But how many under fourteen, Lucio?'' |
41451 | A stanza runs:"What is it makes us fret so hard In this benighted land? |
41451 | CHAPTER II THE PHILIPPINES OF THE PAST How have the Philippines come to present such a unique combination of Spanish and Malay civilization? |
41451 | Did they save a centavo of pay? |
41451 | Do you want us to get up and leave you now-- to depart from your country? |
41451 | Have the average men an account with the bank? |
41451 | How did they treat them? |
41451 | Should Harrison take linen, silver, glass, china and automobiles? |
41451 | Then I heard a man''s voice call from an upstairs window,''What''s the matter down there?'' |
41451 | Were their salaries so big that the task was worth while? |
41451 | What else would you suggest? |
41451 | What if they did fight disguised as peaceful country folk? |
41451 | When I asked my_ cochero_,''Lucio, how many_ niños_ have you?'' |
41451 | Why? |
32601 | Do you think I am nothing? 32601 Whose, indeed?" |
32601 | Why have you come? |
32601 | Behold, hast thou not broken off all my strong legs and left me only the weak ones?" |
32601 | Do you think I shall cease? |
32601 | His mother said:"Are you strong enough for this work?" |
32601 | How could he govern the earthquakes if his left arm were torn off also? |
32601 | Maui asked:"By what shall I be overcome?" |
32601 | Maui replied:"What do I care? |
32601 | Maui said,"Where is fire?" |
32601 | One day he asked the messengers,"Who is it you are taking that present of food to?" |
32601 | Ru became angry and said to Maui:"Who told youngsters to talk? |
32601 | She asked:"Who are you? |
32601 | She was angry and cried out:"Where are the bananas of the sun?" |
32601 | The angry demon cried:"Who is that?" |
32601 | The brothers ridiculed Maui, saying:"Where are the Ulua, and where is Pimoe?" |
32601 | Then Maui said,"Will this be by Hine- nui- te- po? |
32601 | Then she asked,"Art thou Maui?" |
32601 | To whom do you belong?" |
32601 | What is she like?" |
32601 | Where are you? |
32601 | Who are you?" |
32601 | Whose can this fire be?" |
32601 | Why art Thou Sulkily biting, biting below? |
32601 | Why did you not pull more steadily? |
32601 | Will you obey and do as I command? |
35437 | And are you Abraham''s servant? |
35437 | But my hat, how am I going to carry my hat? |
35437 | Can such things be,he said,"and overcome us like a summer cloud, without our special wonders?" |
35437 | Did you believe them? |
35437 | Do you believe in_ me_? |
35437 | Do you know any stories or legends connected with Haleakala, William? |
35437 | Do you see that flat stone? |
35437 | Do you suppose this will fit you? |
35437 | Do you think that some person with a bee in his bonnet has been around? 35437 Do you think you could wear this hat?" |
35437 | Ever see''d one? |
35437 | George,she said,"do you suppose you have a second- hand coat I might give this man? |
35437 | Goin''again? |
35437 | I''ll wear this one,putting the derby on his head,"but this_ papale kilika_( silk hat) is to wear to church, and how am I to carry it home?" |
35437 | Is it not here that Captain Cook was killed? 35437 It sounds wrong-- why should the name of your wife appear?" |
35437 | May I drink? |
35437 | Take me? |
35437 | That hat for me? 35437 What do you think about these?" |
35437 | Will you believe in me if I say that I have done with''Hawaii for the Hawaiians'', under such leadership? |
35437 | _ Auhea oe, Nalima? 35437 _ Auwe_, it''s some trespasser that''s come up here because Kalani is away, what shall I do?" |
35437 | Also was not Lahaina the capital, where young people were numerous and where her accomplishments would be appreciated? |
35437 | As he stepped nearer she said,"Why did you not let me thank you? |
35437 | Do you see those houses away down the coast, this side of the high lands of Honokua? |
35437 | Do you think you can mend it so that I can wear it on Sunday? |
35437 | Has the stone a story?" |
35437 | Kawelu awoke; Hiku was gone, and whither? |
35437 | Keawe stepped towards her and said,"Do you remember the shark?" |
35437 | On page 121, a quotation mark was added("It sounds wrong-- why should the name of your wife appear?") |
35437 | Peleg said to himself:"Why not train sharks to catch fish? |
35437 | Perhaps forever? |
35437 | What; this clod of earth dare to talk in this manner to our Lani? |
35437 | [ Footnote 1:"Where are you, Nalima? |
35437 | cried Ruth,"May I find some, Mamma?" |
35437 | is that so?"] |
35437 | thought Mrs. Hamilton,"what, I wonder, will be the first thing given me to do this beautiful day?" |
43462 | ''What difference should that make, if she is greater and more skilful than you?'' 43462 ''Why should I?'' |
43462 | But, dear papa, what are you hiding behind you? |
43462 | She bowed before the chief, and said,''Will you try the race with me instead of your friend?'' 43462 Why was n''t I made white?" |
43462 | And does she not then lie trembling at the thought that she may sometime be swallowed up in a tremendous flow of lava? |
43462 | Are n''t you?" |
43462 | As he appears again out of the water they shout in excitement,"What luck, Hiko? |
43462 | As they creep out and look over the edge, what is before them? |
43462 | But how do they eat? |
43462 | But then, you say, this is a holiday; why should they not be idle and gay? |
43462 | But what cares little Auwae for all this? |
43462 | But what is poi? |
43462 | Did you ever hear of land- shells? |
43462 | Do you imagine he found a kind captain waiting at some dock who became his good friend and helper? |
43462 | Do you not think that would have been wiser and more honest? |
43462 | Do you suppose it hurts? |
43462 | Does this surprise you? |
43462 | How did people come to live here after the island had grown up out of the sea? |
43462 | Is she not sometimes awakened in the night by the low rumbling sound coming to her through the clear air? |
43462 | No one gives a thought to wet clothing, for will it not be dry again a few minutes after the rain stops falling? |
43462 | Or was it the temple of Lono with ladders reaching up to the altars? |
43462 | She would say:"Do you suppose any living people could set such great stones in place? |
43462 | Suddenly a heavy shower takes them by surprise, and Auwae cries out in delight:"Upa, is n''t this fun? |
43462 | The boy''s busy mind has planned new sport for the afternoon, and he says:"Auwae, after you have had your nap, do you want to fish? |
43462 | The waves are just fine to- day for bathing, are n''t they?" |
43462 | Was it a forest that had slid down into the sea? |
43462 | What difference does it make to her that her island home, the land of beauty and of flowers, is under American rule? |
43462 | What do you think shall be done to prepare for it? |
43462 | What is it that makes her look so different from her white sisters? |
43462 | What luck?" |
43462 | What should he do? |
43462 | What was it? |
43462 | Where did Auwae learn this prayer? |
43462 | Who of the company will stop her chattering and garland- making long enough to set the table? |
43462 | Why did n''t he leave it with his wife at home? |
43462 | Why should she not fear? |
43462 | Why, do you ask? |
43462 | Will he ever come back? |
43462 | he exclaimed,''with a woman?'' |
13222 | Are you sick? |
13222 | Can you really drive a stake with a tree? |
13222 | Do the companies advance money to bring over Chinese? |
13222 | Do you think he knows the soundings well enough? |
13222 | How do you arrange to get your Chinese? |
13222 | Mother,said he,"how shall I succeed in espousing this proud princess? |
13222 | Suppose a man does not pay? |
13222 | Suppose a white man had no money,said I,"what sort of a man would you think him?" |
13222 | Suppose white man no got money? |
13222 | Suppose,said I,"a Chinaman refuses to respect the company''s decision, in case of a quarrel?" |
13222 | Timber? |
13222 | What can I do? |
13222 | Why? |
13222 | And now, you will ask, what does a leper look like? |
13222 | Are the women often diseased? |
13222 | At the sight of his old friends, whose bodies he had pierced with many wounds in punishment, he cries:"Where are those miserable favorites?" |
13222 | Auhea iho nei la hoi Ua mau wahi hulu alaala nei Au i oo aku ai I ka maka o ke keiki A Maihuna? |
13222 | Can any one blame them, if they were bored to desperation by such a life as this, and preferred death to remaining on the reservation? |
13222 | Did he attempt to regulate the conduct of the growing boys and girls? |
13222 | Do the Indians have to ask permission to go to the town? |
13222 | Do the Indians marry on the reservation? |
13222 | Do you attempt to make them rise at any specified hour in the morning? |
13222 | Have you a hospital, or do you attempt to isolate those who are diseased? |
13222 | Have you a list or roster of the Indians who belong on the reservation? |
13222 | He said:"Suppose you work for me; suppose I pay you; what business I what you do with money? |
13222 | How do they catch a sea- lion? |
13222 | How many Indians own horses? |
13222 | I wonder who sends the most, the Chinaman or the white foreigner? |
13222 | In the evening I related this incident to our host, an old resident, and said,"I suppose this man could read?" |
13222 | Is he, then, an idolater? |
13222 | Is not all this deplorable? |
13222 | Is there much drunkenness? |
13222 | Liloa, awakening, said,"_ Owai la keia_?--Who is this?" |
13222 | Looking up at the black smoke of the departing ship, you say to yourself,"Who cares?" |
13222 | On the voyage up I said to an Oregonian,"You have a good timber country, I hear?" |
13222 | Suppose it is, above the Dalles, a mile wide and fifty feet deep; at the narrow gorge it is but a hundred yards wide-- how deep must it be? |
13222 | Then, addressing the slumbering man,"Are you, then, alone here?" |
13222 | They complain in Olympia that Washington Territory gets but little immigration; but what wonder? |
13222 | This expression occurs frequently in ancient poems:_ Auhea oe, e ka lani? |
13222 | Was there any compulsion used? |
13222 | Were they birds To fly thus in the air? |
13222 | What if children are born irregularly? |
13222 | What must I do? |
13222 | Where just now are those chiefs, Rebellious and weak, Whom the point of the spear Has transfixed-- the spear of the Son of Maihuna? |
13222 | Why should they be? |
13222 | Why should this class of Indians be compelled to live on reservations? |
13222 | Why, then, should the United States Government forcibly make paupers of them? |
39195 | Are there any other members of his family, O Inaina, who could resist your claim? |
39195 | Can you go down into the dark land and get that spirit and put it back in the body which lies here? |
39195 | How many other children in your family? |
39195 | What does he do? |
39195 | What water is this you want? |
39195 | Who is your chief? |
39195 | Anuenue asked,"Suppose I get that child; who is to give it the proper name?" |
39195 | As she came near to them Ku said,"From what place do you come?" |
39195 | At last he asked his parents:"Are we here, all of us? |
39195 | By and by Ke- au- nini asked his mother,"Where is my father?" |
39195 | From what place do you come?" |
39195 | Have I no other relative in the world?" |
39195 | Have I questioned your right to go on the sea?" |
39195 | He asked,"Where is there a place?" |
39195 | He gave her signs for the boy, saying,"When the boy says to you,''Where is my father?'' |
39195 | He loved his brother- in- law, and asked,"How did you come to this place?" |
39195 | He returned to the cave and asked the woman,"What is that noise I heard from the sea?" |
39195 | He took one of these boats in his hands, saying,"How can I ride in this small canoe?" |
39195 | Hiilei asked him gently,"Who are you, and from what place do you come?" |
39195 | Hiku chanted:"Are you known by Papa and Wakea, O eyelashes or rays of the sun? |
39195 | Hinole asked him,"Whence do you come, and what house do you live in?" |
39195 | Honu asked,"Where are you going?" |
39195 | How could these ghosts be detected? |
39195 | Ku came and asked the travellers,"What boat is this, and from what place has it come?" |
39195 | Lono- kai asked,"Who is your king?" |
39195 | Lono- kai asked,"Who is your ruler?" |
39195 | Lono- kai said:"What right have you to question me? |
39195 | Olopana asked Ke- au- nini,"Which of the tabu houses do you wish to take as your residence?" |
39195 | Olopana asked his priests:"Why does the young chief fail to appear? |
39195 | Olopana was very curious, and asked,"How many people are needed to make a house like this so quickly?" |
39195 | One called to the other,"What have we caught this morning?" |
39195 | Ounauna saw her passing back and forth, and said,"What are you seeking, O Kiha- wahine?" |
39195 | Pii- moi, a god of the sun, asked Akoa- koa, the coral,"What is the matter with the land?" |
39195 | Shall we hear the story of Kamakau, who at some time in the indefinite past dwelt in the shadow of the stone face? |
39195 | She said,"Why do you want that water?" |
39195 | She screamed out,"Where is the value of your journey, if you return without my husband?" |
39195 | Silence fell on the group, and Milu cried out:"Who is the disturber of our sport? |
39195 | So she called to his people:"Who is the great kupua[ wizard] who has killed my brother? |
39195 | So she called:"Is that you, O eye of the day? |
39195 | Tell Ke- au- nini- ula- o- ka- lani; I was in the midst of the sea With the child of our love; My child, my little child, Where are you? |
39195 | The boy asked,"Where is my grandfather, Ke- au- nini?" |
39195 | The father heard the voice and softly uttered another chant:"In the silence Has been heard the gods of the night; What is this wailing over us? |
39195 | The first will ask you,''What is the fruit[ desire] of your heart?'' |
39195 | The fishermen said to Luu- kia,"Will you provide food, fish, and clothing?" |
39195 | The king will awake and call,''Why does this traveller come?'' |
39195 | The priest said to Olopana:"Do you think that you can treat this man as one of us? |
39195 | The woman heard his breathing, and asked,"Why do you breathe like this?" |
39195 | Then Ku asked again,"Whose child are you?" |
39195 | Then Ounauna said,"Suppose I die, what will you do to correct any mistakes you have made?" |
39195 | They refused to give Puna up, crying out:"Where is your husband? |
39195 | This chiefess heard their noisy clamor and asked her servant,"What''s the trouble with these noisy ones?" |
39195 | Was this the right reward? |
39195 | What was that to him? |
39195 | When Kane said,"Have you love for your child?" |
39195 | Where are you?" |
39195 | Where have I been? |
39195 | Who is the high chief of your land?" |
39195 | Why do you try to make me afraid? |
39195 | Will you obey once more?" |
39195 | You asked,''What water do you want?'' |
28034 | A story, children; what shall it be about? |
28034 | Are they worshiped, aunty? |
28034 | Aunty, what do you mean by the borrowed tenements of the crabs? |
28034 | Aunty, where are you? |
28034 | Aunty,asked Carrie,"did n''t they have such cities in Old Testament times?" |
28034 | Aunty,said Carrie,"I have frequently read of ships''crossing the bar;''what does it mean?" |
28034 | Aunty,said Harry,"what became of the poor schooner?" |
28034 | Aunty,said little Alice,"do steamers have sails?" |
28034 | Aunty,said little Alice,"it was n''t a true story; was it?" |
28034 | But where are the falls? |
28034 | Did he carry your trunks, aunty? |
28034 | Did the king have more than one wife? |
28034 | Did you find all your things? |
28034 | Do n''t they ever get hurt, aunty? |
28034 | Do n''t they have wells in Panama? |
28034 | Do n''t you hear the bell? |
28034 | Do they have snakes on the islands? |
28034 | Green rose? |
28034 | Hot, aunty, and in January too? |
28034 | How did it feel to walk on the lava, aunty? |
28034 | How large is it? |
28034 | How wide were they? |
28034 | Now, aunty, what are we to see to- day, and where are we to go? |
28034 | The_ Golden Gate!_said wee Alice, in astonishment,"They do n''t really have a golden gate; do they?" |
28034 | Well, what do they call it so for? |
28034 | What are_ adobe_ houses? |
28034 | What are_ candle- nuts_? |
28034 | What are_ lassos_? |
28034 | What are_ levees_? |
28034 | What are_ saddle- bags_? |
28034 | What are_ sea- lions_? |
28034 | What are_ skip jacks_? |
28034 | What are_ stalactites_? |
28034 | What did they want him for? |
28034 | What fruit was it, aunty? |
28034 | What is a_ slough_? |
28034 | What is a_ transom_, aunty? |
28034 | What is a_ waterspout_? |
28034 | What is''brackish,''aunty? |
28034 | What is_ concrete_? |
28034 | What is_ leeward_? |
28034 | What is_ tapa_, aunty? |
28034 | What was it, aunty? |
28034 | What were their sacrifices, aunty? |
28034 | What''s the_ Union Jack_? |
28034 | Why do they call it''_ The Canoe_''? |
28034 | Why, aunty, what did he do that for? |
28034 | Would n''t they hurt you? |
28034 | You spoke of Pele''s_ tabus_; what is a tabu, aunty? |
28034 | _ Raw_ fish, aunty? |
28034 | _ Taro patches_, aunty? 28034 _ Tree- shells!_ What are they, aunty?" |
28034 | A missionary was talking to a high chief woman, and said to her,"Why do n''t you plant cocoa- nuts, so that trees may grow?" |
28034 | A shark and a devil- fish came near the ship--"A_ devil- fish!_"the children all exclaimed;"_ why_, what sort of a fish is that?" |
28034 | Are you well? |
28034 | But then,"What''s in a name?" |
28034 | Heads were popped out of staterooms, and"What''s the matter?" |
28034 | Is a god afraid?" |
28034 | It quite revived our courage, for what were our nine days compared with their sixty days? |
28034 | One sentence was,"He olu olu anei oe?" |
28034 | The people said,"Can a god groan? |
28034 | We had a Chinese steward on board--"What does a_ steward_ do on a ship?" |
28034 | What are they?" |
28034 | What could it be? |
28034 | What do you mean?" |
28034 | What do you think I did? |
28034 | What made them call it so?" |
28034 | You are willing; an''t you, aunty?" |
6750 | Is that possibly a pool of blood? |
6750 | Kilauea? 6750 Should they fly or not? |
6750 | What''s the use of being in a hurry? |
6750 | Will my spirit never die, and can this poor weak body live again? |
6750 | cold? |
6750 | And if it be so cold at 4000 feet, what will it be at 14,000? |
6750 | Are the natives all cannibals? |
6750 | Are the people very savage?" |
6750 | Are they as pretty as the other South Sea Islands? |
6750 | Are they the same as Otaheite? |
6750 | But what are cuts, bruises, fatigue, and singed eyelashes, in comparison with the awful sublimities I have witnessed to- day? |
6750 | Could any tradition of the Mosaic ordinance on this subject have travelled hither? |
6750 | Deborah''s horse I knew was strong, and shod, but my unshod and untried mare, what of her? |
6750 | Does any one live on them but the savages? |
6750 | Does not all this sound painfully civilized? |
6750 | Does the king wear clothes? |
6750 | He frequently brought me guavas on the road, saying,"eat,"and often rode up, saying interrogatively,"tired?" |
6750 | He knows a little abrupt, disjointed, almost unintelligible English, and comes up every now and then with an interrogation in his manner,"Father? |
6750 | How came?" |
6750 | How do they come too, on every atoll or rock that raises its head throughout this lonely ocean? |
6750 | Hymenophylloides?). |
6750 | I am often reminded of Hazael''s question,"Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?" |
6750 | I wonder if he is ever unamiable, or tired, or perturbed? |
6750 | If any serious loss arises to themselves or others through their carelessness, they shrug their shoulders, and say,"What does it matter?" |
6750 | Is it because that, though the magic of novelty is over it, there is a perpetual undercurrent of home resemblance? |
6750 | Is it"always afternoon"here, I wonder? |
6750 | It is itself shaded by date palms and algarobas, and is surrounded by hibiscus, oleanders, and the datura arborea(? |
6750 | Lunalilo?" |
6750 | Nearly blinded by scuds of sand, we rode for hours through the volcanic wilderness; always the same rigid mamane,( Sophora Chrysophylla?) |
6750 | Often since I finished my last letter has Hazael''s reply to Elisha occurred to me,"Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?" |
6750 | People will ask you,"What is the food?" |
6750 | The hourly question was,"What of the volcano?" |
6750 | Then, Mr. President, I ask, where lies virtue, where lies justice? |
6750 | There were some very fine tree- ferns( Cibotium Chamissoi? |
6750 | They are not the same as the Fijis, are they? |
6750 | Wallace?" |
6750 | Was it nearer God, I wonder, because so far from man and his little works and ways? |
6750 | Was there ever a more pitiful sight? |
6750 | Was there ever such an adventure? |
6750 | Was there ever such an atmosphere? |
6750 | Was there ever such sunshine? |
6750 | Were we stemming the torrent, or was it sweeping us back that very short distance which lay between us and the mountainous breakers? |
6750 | What are haoles always unhappy about?" |
6750 | What do you want?" |
6750 | What sort of idols do they worship? |
6750 | What would his episcopal brethren at home think of such a hardship? |
6750 | Whenever I look up from my writing, I ask, Was there ever such green? |
6750 | Where among us shall we find the numberless drawbacks which, in less favoured countries, the labourer has to contend with? |
6750 | Who do they belong to? |
6750 | Why do people persist in sending"ne''er- do- weels"to such regions without a definite occupation? |
6750 | Why should they indeed? |
6750 | Will anything grow on them? |
6750 | Will you by persisting that this law remain in force make us a nation of hypocrites? |
6750 | Would their beautiful homes become a waste of jagged lava and black sand, like the neighbouring district of Puna, once as fair as Hilo?" |
6750 | married? |
6750 | mother? |
6750 | watch? |
6750 | { 199} Cynodon Dactylon(?) |
2416 | ''But how could you do it?'' 2416 ''John, John, what does it mean?'' |
2416 | ''What do you mean?'' 2416 A woman?" |
2416 | And never come back? |
2416 | And you did n''t know? |
2416 | And you remember who fought for you? 2416 Because you knew?" |
2416 | Brothers, is it not strange? 2416 But what is it?" |
2416 | But who is she? |
2416 | But why? |
2416 | Did you ever hear of Lucy Mokunui? |
2416 | Do you wonder that I lost my heart to Kona eighteen years ago? |
2416 | Does it ever blow here?--ever really blow? 2416 Does n''t a little whiff of it ever eddy around somehow, and get down here?" |
2416 | Had n''t you better ask somebody else? 2416 He has never done wrong to you?--personally and directly, I mean?" |
2416 | He held out his hand, and what in high heaven or hell did I care? 2416 Hello, Ford, what are you doing here? |
2416 | How can it blow, with a barrier like that to stop it? |
2416 | How much will you take to leave the Islands and never come back? |
2416 | I say, you know, I''ve never done you any wrong, have I? |
2416 | John, who is Joe Garland? |
2416 | Look here, Ford, is n''t it time you let up on Joe Garland? 2416 Love?" |
2416 | Lucy Mokunui? |
2416 | Not his fault? |
2416 | Now just what do you mean? |
2416 | Oh, about Joe Garland? |
2416 | Papa, if Steve ever comes to the United States, may n''t he come and see us some time? |
2416 | Persecution? |
2416 | Some rash act? |
2416 | The boy, the two women, and the man? |
2416 | The goats? |
2416 | Were n''t you afraid? |
2416 | What do you want? |
2416 | What do you want? |
2416 | What has become of Susie Maydwell? |
2416 | What have you done with my people? |
2416 | What is greater than God, then? |
2416 | What is it? |
2416 | What is the greatest thing in the world? |
2416 | What is this infallible test? |
2416 | Where''s the carriage? |
2416 | Who are you? |
2416 | Who brought the sickness, Koolau? |
2416 | Who can say? 2416 Who is he?" |
2416 | Who the devil gave it to you to be judge and jury? 2416 Who? |
2416 | Why I, any more than you? |
2416 | Why did you take my part? |
2416 | Why do n''t you reach him a hand? |
2416 | Why not? |
2416 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
2416 | You discharged him for inefficiency? |
2416 | You do n''t mean to say you do n''t know? |
2416 | You remember that first time I came to school and the boys ducked me? |
2416 | You want me to go? |
2416 | ''It''s a joke, is n''t it? |
2416 | ''What could I do?'' |
2416 | Am I a leper, John?'' |
2416 | Am I to expect tomorrow your ukase that I give up Scotch and soda or your patronage? |
2416 | And after all, who shall say? |
2416 | And do you know what Lyte held? |
2416 | And what chance would she have in such a struggle? |
2416 | And who are these white men? |
2416 | Blow? |
2416 | But how? |
2416 | But why had Steve not spoken? |
2416 | Do you think I was going to let that big Dutchman beat me? |
2416 | Does landlordism give you control of the immortal souls of those that toil for you? |
2416 | Had it been prophecy? |
2416 | Happy to get away? |
2416 | Have you noticed how the land and the sea breathe turn and turn about?" |
2416 | Have you received one dollar, as much as one dollar, any one of you, for the land? |
2416 | Hello, Abe, is that you? |
2416 | How could he be otherwise with that tremendous vitality and incredible health? |
2416 | How long? |
2416 | How''s Ned, and Charley, and all the crowd? |
2416 | If I were a leper would I offer you my hand? |
2416 | If this awful fate fell to Lucy Mokunui, what might my lot not be?--or anybody''s lot? |
2416 | Is n''t this a bit festive?" |
2416 | It was because--"Well, what have you got to say? |
2416 | May n''t he, if he happens to be in the United States some time, come and see us?" |
2416 | My God, man, what could I do? |
2416 | Now what did he do? |
2416 | Only a week? |
2416 | Sanguine? |
2416 | Seasick? |
2416 | Snatches of his conversation told me that the wind was blowing:"Rip- snorting and back- jumping, eh? |
2416 | Steve?" |
2416 | They who had nothing have everything, and if you, or I, or any Kanaka be hungry, they sneer and say,''Well, why do n''t you work? |
2416 | This man-- what does it matter? |
2416 | Was there an essential difference? |
2416 | Well, I was only a little lad, too, but why could not I become what"Signa"dreamed of being? |
2416 | What did these preachers of the word of God and the word of Rum give us for the land? |
2416 | What difference between him and any beach- comber? |
2416 | What had become of him? |
2416 | What was it she had heard one day? |
2416 | What was the difference, he asked himself, between the shameless, grass- girdled_ hula_ dances and the decollete dances of the women of his own race? |
2416 | What would you have done? |
2416 | When would they ever meet again? |
2416 | Where''s the boat?'' |
2416 | Who has extracted the most from life? |
2416 | Who is he?" |
2416 | Why are there no marriages?" |
2416 | Why did we come back? |
2416 | Why had he not spoken under the_ hau_ tree at Waikiki? |
2416 | Why had he not spoken? |
2416 | Why should the wholeness of that wild youth of his change to this? |
2416 | Why? |
2416 | Will you come with me?" |
2416 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
2416 | You think she''s beautiful, eh? |
2416 | You''ve made a terrible fuss talking about your duty, have n''t you? |
2416 | or was it a matter of degree? |
2416 | who lied for you harder than you could lie, and swore he knew you could n''t swim? |
18450 | And what is that? |
18450 | Ca n''t you have patience and let me take breath? |
18450 | Desires me for what? |
18450 | How, indeed? |
18450 | Kaala lost? 18450 Lost to whom?" |
18450 | Now, what have you to say? 18450 Oh, why,"she cried,"did the gods leave me? |
18450 | Well,said Kalelealuaka,"when you are restless at night, what does your mind find to do?" |
18450 | What Kapeepee? |
18450 | What Kauila? |
18450 | What is that? |
18450 | What shall we wish? |
18450 | What sort of a coming back is this? |
18450 | Where is he? |
18450 | Where is this father of mine? |
18450 | Wherefore perish? |
18450 | Why is it so? |
18450 | Why? |
18450 | Will they do your bidding in everything? |
18450 | Again he asked:"Where is this fire that you are hiding from me?" |
18450 | And Niheu replied,"What, then, shall we fight?" |
18450 | And he replied,"No; have I drunk awa? |
18450 | And they answered:"Whose, indeed? |
18450 | And who shall feed me with taro and breadfruit like the chief of Olowalu, when I have no daughter to give away? |
18450 | And will ye dream of the gods of the deep? |
18450 | Are not these the reefs of Haupu? |
18450 | Are you baking the honu And the red sweet hala? |
18450 | Are you in the cave of Malauea? |
18450 | Are you my wife, that you should obtain my sled?" |
18450 | At one of their resting- places, journeying thus, he said, with direct truthfulness, as his words proved:"Where are you, my son? |
18450 | At this place Puniaiki asked the paddlers:"What is the name of that surf cresting beneath the prow of our canoes?" |
18450 | At this slight his wives said:"Well, now, do you think we are accustomed to work? |
18450 | Behold, hast thou not broken off all my strong legs, and left me only the weak ones?" |
18450 | Being asked"Why enterest thou this forbidden door?" |
18450 | But with one''s love in the seething gulf of the whirlpool, what would be to him the sublime cataract? |
18450 | Dost thou sleep with the fish gods, or must I go to join thee in the great shark''s maw?" |
18450 | Has a wild hog torn her? |
18450 | Has she twined wreaths for another''s neck for me to break? |
18450 | Have I displeased you in any way?" |
18450 | Have ye gone to the shores of Kahiki, To the land of our father, Wakea? |
18450 | He looked so sternly at her as he said this that she cried out to him,"Are you annoyed with me? |
18450 | He only said,"Why, what have you done that would displease me?" |
18450 | He thinks he hears a voice sounding down within his soul; and cries,"Where art thou, O Kaala? |
18450 | How came you to pass my lunas?" |
18450 | How shall we account for such coincidences? |
18450 | If you think I have been false to you, why not seek proof before believing it?" |
18450 | In the morning, Kalelealuaka called to his wives, and said:"Where are you? |
18450 | Is the woman gone?" |
18450 | It is as if you had created her, for without you, where would she be now? |
18450 | It may do while my father is alive; but if he should die, whence would come our support?" |
18450 | Kakuhihewa called to him,"Come, how went the battle?" |
18450 | Kalelealuaka cheerily greeted him, and the following dialogue occurred: K."Whither are you trudging, Maliuhaaino?" |
18450 | Kana replied,"What is there to destroy us? |
18450 | Kapoi asked the owl,"How many eggs had you?" |
18450 | Lehuanui stood over him, adze in hand, and called,"O King, where are my children?" |
18450 | Must I go and live in that thing again? |
18450 | O Kaaialii, who shall spear the uku? |
18450 | O Kaala, who shall gather the na- u? |
18450 | O mother, where now is thy son? |
18450 | O my friend, Will ye sleep in the cave evermore?" |
18450 | O sire, where now is thy child? |
18450 | Or has the anaana prayer of death struck her heart, and does she lie cold on the sod of Mahana? |
18450 | Shall I bring the uwau, The pala, and the ohelo? |
18450 | Shall I bring you sweet water, The water of the mountain? |
18450 | Shall I pound the kalo of Maui? |
18450 | Shall we dip in the gourd together? |
18450 | She was my very breath, and my life, and how shall I live without her? |
18450 | So Maui- mua said:"Tell me, where is the fire?" |
18450 | The eldest spoke to him:"Why do you sleep, my father? |
18450 | The latter then asked:"Does this house belong to you?" |
18450 | Then Niheu asked him,"What made you go on without coming to the house of Niheu?" |
18450 | Then said they to him:"How about the fire?" |
18450 | Then spoke Niheu:"Why could you not wait before looking at our father? |
18450 | Then there was great wailing for the chief and the maid who lay in the cave; and thus wailed Ua:"Where art thou, O brave chief? |
18450 | They pursued their course again until Niheu, being on the watch, cried out,"Why sleepest thou, O Kana? |
18450 | They went across Kumakaha to Hualea, when the girl said,"Why do n''t you stay and have something to eat before we go?" |
18450 | This man, seeing his doleful plight, asked,"Why these tears, O my father?" |
18450 | To this he replied:"My hand constrains me to plant; I crave work; does idleness bring in anything? |
18450 | To what shall we compare the prowess of our hero? |
18450 | Upon this, Kana pointed out to Niheu a bush, and said,"Can you pull up that bush?" |
18450 | Was that my body? |
18450 | What, to see amid the boiling foam the upturned face, and the dear, tender body of one''s own and only poor dear love, all mangled? |
18450 | When all was ready and they had seated themselves, the King said,"Shall we eat, or shall we talk?" |
18450 | When he finally stood before Kakaalaneo, the latter said to him:"How is this? |
18450 | When the man returned to the King and gave him the fish, the King asked:"Who gave it to you?" |
18450 | When they had gone about half- way to the brink of the precipice, Kapeepeekauila exclaimed,"What is this? |
18450 | When they reached the fishers Aiai asked them,"What are those things placed there for?" |
18450 | Where are you from?" |
18450 | Where art thou, O fond girl? |
18450 | Where art thou? |
18450 | Who shall soothe my limbs when I return from spearing the ohua? |
18450 | Who so loved to throw the maika ball, or hurl the spear, or thrust aside the many javelins flung at his naked chest, as the chief of Kohala? |
18450 | Whose can this fire be?" |
18450 | Why are you not cooked alive, as I ordered? |
18450 | Why is she taken and I, so useless, left?" |
18450 | Will ye feed on the moss of the cave, And the limpets of the surf- beaten shore? |
18450 | Will ye sleep by the sound of the sea? |
18450 | Will you not thereby have lasting cause for dissatisfaction and contention between you in the future?" |
18450 | With hot haste and eager asking eyes does the love- lorn chief meet the maiden messenger, and cries,"Why does Kaala delay in the valley? |
18450 | are you asleep?" |
18450 | do n''t you know about the war?" |
18450 | do you intend to desert me?" |
18450 | said Kamehameha,"art thou a chief, and wouldst cast away life for a girl? |
18450 | said the tender child,"since when is Kalani ill? |
18450 | shouted Kana;"what were you looking down for? |
18450 | where should Misty Eyes find his love in this blinding storm? |
18450 | why do n''t you take pity on me? |
34744 | A chief, perhaps? |
34744 | And did she ever get one? |
34744 | And what did you do then? |
34744 | And what did you do with the prisoners? |
34744 | And what sort of person is my host? |
34744 | And you believe all that nonsense? |
34744 | And you went down and told Maloka exactly when and where to expect her? |
34744 | And your uncle? |
34744 | Any fissures? |
34744 | Are n''t you afraid? |
34744 | Are there any volcanoes in England? |
34744 | Are they all so dreadfully afraid of the volcano? |
34744 | Asleep? |
34744 | Can he understand if he hears? |
34744 | Did the_ Hornet''s_ men send down for water to Kalaua''s well? |
34744 | Did they? |
34744 | Do you wish to stop here in your own island? |
34744 | Frank,I cried,"how on earth can you tease her so? |
34744 | Going to stop with Kalaua, eh? |
34744 | How did it all happen? |
34744 | How did you get here so soon? |
34744 | How goes the fire? |
34744 | How should I know? |
34744 | How so? |
34744 | How so? |
34744 | How will he ever get over? |
34744 | I wonder what sort of a match you expect to make, that you''re getting yourself up so smart for the occasion? |
34744 | Is he asleep? |
34744 | Is the volcano still at work, Frank? |
34744 | Kea, do you take this god, Maloka, for your wedded lord? |
34744 | Lava, I suppose, and sulphur, and so forth? |
34744 | Maloka, do you take this girl, Kea, for your wedded wife? |
34744 | No? |
34744 | Not total? |
34744 | Observations on Mauna Loa? |
34744 | Oh, Mr. Hesselgrave, if that''s so, what on earth made you ever leave England to come to such a country as Hawaii? |
34744 | Oh, you need n''t be afraid,Frank answered laughing;"need they, Tom? |
34744 | On our great volcano? 34744 Steam issuing from them?" |
34744 | Tom,said he impressively,"does it ever strike you there''s something very mysterious indeed about this marriage of Kea''s?" |
34744 | Well, what do you think you''ll do now? |
34744 | What are the flowers for? |
34744 | What are we to do? |
34744 | What do you want the rope for? |
34744 | What does that matter,I answered,"if science is satisfied? |
34744 | What will you do now, Kea? |
34744 | What''s to become of me? 34744 What, the Floor of the Hawaiians?" |
34744 | Where to? |
34744 | Where''s Kalaua now? |
34744 | Where''s Kea, old lady? |
34744 | Which way have they gone, you hag? |
34744 | Who are all these people here? |
34744 | Who''s Maloka? |
34744 | Why not? |
34744 | Why, you see,he answered,"they''re getting ready for a wedding: but where''s the bridegroom? |
34744 | Would you like to taste some? 34744 You think it''s he who''s set it on fire then?" |
34744 | You think so? |
34744 | You think that will bring an eruption in its train? |
34744 | You would allow me to pay for our board and lodging, of course? |
34744 | After all, when one looks the thing squarely in the face, what did you really see and feel sure of? |
34744 | And you? |
34744 | Are n''t you afraid, too, of the stones and ashes?" |
34744 | But with that weak and patched- up line of rotten old cords? |
34744 | But you do n''t think, then, I run any risk by remaining under this roof till my leg gets well again?" |
34744 | Could I hold on till the end? |
34744 | Could I make myself heard, I wondered to myself, above the constant hiss and roar and din of that volcanic outburst? |
34744 | Could Maloka live in some cave of the platform? |
34744 | Could it be that they meant deliberately to leave me there unaided to die? |
34744 | Could this be Kalaua and his friend again? |
34744 | Did Kalaua mean to put me there and then through some hideous and inhuman wedding ceremony? |
34744 | Do n''t you see poor Kea''s dreadfully distressed? |
34744 | Had he gone to call other natives to his assistance, and to bring ropes and ladders to haul me up from that unearthly crater? |
34744 | Had he gone to seek aid on my behalf, I wondered? |
34744 | How can I thank you enough? |
34744 | How dare they interfere with the bridals of Maloka?" |
34744 | I wonder what they call this precious stuff of theirs?" |
34744 | I wonder who on earth this Maloka is? |
34744 | Is it agreed? |
34744 | Is the mountain so very dangerous then?" |
34744 | Is this a time to make plans for the future? |
34744 | May I venture to offer you the hospitality of a humble Hawaiian roof? |
34744 | May we expect you to stop with us then? |
34744 | Pulling the cord that moved my looking- glass, I flashed back"Well?" |
34744 | Scientific observations? |
34744 | Shall you go and see it?" |
34744 | Sounds awfully grand that, does n''t it? |
34744 | This midnight meeting? |
34744 | Was I bound to atone for the saving of my life by accepting in wedlock the last daughter and heiress of the priests of Pélé? |
34744 | Was I the bridegroom for whom the stranger was to answer? |
34744 | Was this Maloka? |
34744 | Was this the secret of their sudden kindness to me? |
34744 | Was this-- could it be, some wonderful heathen plot or contrivance to carry me off and marry me perforce against my will to Kea? |
34744 | Were they afraid to meddle with the prisoners of the goddess? |
34744 | Were they going to marry me against my will to Kea? |
34744 | Were they really come to murder me or to carry me off by force? |
34744 | What could all this mean? |
34744 | What does an ugly fellow such as that want with a young and beautiful wife like Kea? |
34744 | What on earth could it be? |
34744 | What on earth, I thought, made me ever take to such a trade as vulcanology? |
34744 | What right had they, he asked in a threatening voice, to come trespassing there on private property? |
34744 | What say you?" |
34744 | What was to be done? |
34744 | What''s the use of throwing away beauty like hers upon Maloka? |
34744 | What? |
34744 | When? |
34744 | Where was Kea? |
34744 | Where? |
34744 | Who is he, or what is it?" |
34744 | Whose festival?" |
34744 | Why all this mystery? |
34744 | Why could n''t Kea be quietly married like any one else? |
34744 | Why could n''t Kea''s lover come to the house at a reasonable hour, like all the rest of humanity? |
34744 | Why, did n''t they take in Captain Cook, and roast him and eat him, they were so very fond of him? |
34744 | Would anybody come to help me? |
34744 | Would it crack? |
34744 | Would it yield? |
34744 | Would n''t they at least sleep down at his house? |
34744 | Would she come back in time, or would the fiery flood burst up once more to the level where I lay before she had time to arrive with assistance? |
34744 | You do n''t mean to say your people go on believing still in such childish nonsense as gods and goddesses?" |
34744 | and why was she out at this time of night, with all her friends, and in her wedding garments? |
60279 | Ah, that is the trouble? |
60279 | And did you say anything to Pele? |
60279 | Are you from Kanaloa? |
60279 | But where is Pele? |
60279 | Can it be that you are not stirred by his protestations? 60279 Do you want to kill me?" |
60279 | Have you not some prayer to offer? |
60279 | How came it about that she should cause his death? |
60279 | How can that be? |
60279 | How did you get on? |
60279 | How is it with you, O Lohiau? |
60279 | How is my prayer? |
60279 | How is this, that you are a- hungered so soon after the feast of which you have partaken? 60279 How then shall I overtake him?" |
60279 | How was my prayer? |
60279 | How, then, did he become alive again? |
60279 | If none of these beautiful women is Pele, how can you think that a wrinkled old woman like me is the divine and beautiful Pele? |
60279 | Is it likely,Lohiau replied,"is it likely that I shall hit this time, having missed so many shots before?" |
60279 | Is that all you have? |
60279 | Is that all? |
60279 | Some man surfing in our tabu waters-- yet how can that be? 60279 Tell me, pray, where did you lay your brother''s body?" |
60279 | That Lohiau is in trouble? |
60279 | Well, Kolea, what sort of a place is Kahiki? |
60279 | Well, what of it? 60279 What are you about?" |
60279 | What does this mean? |
60279 | What is it you mean? |
60279 | What is the name of the country? |
60279 | What then? 60279 Where are they from?" |
60279 | Where are they? |
60279 | Where is my sister? 60279 Where is she?" |
60279 | Where''s your husband? |
60279 | Who in the world is meddling with your lehuas? |
60279 | Who is the woman? |
60279 | ( Heaha ka hua i ka umauma? |
60279 | A kaunu no anei oe o ke aloha la? |
60279 | A nana aku nei, he mea aha ia? |
60279 | An offering''s laid-- a pig? |
60279 | And what is my gift in return? |
60279 | And what of Paoa, the man who had come with heart full of bitterness, determined on revenge? |
60279 | And what was the cause of his death?" |
60279 | And who are these beings of might? |
60279 | And you, Captain Spry, whose the defeat? |
60279 | Auhea anei oe? |
60279 | Auhea pahoehoe la? |
60279 | But Hiiaka- of- the- lightning- flash scouted the idea:"How can that be? |
60279 | But what has happened to you? |
60279 | But why stand we here? |
60279 | Deem''st it a crime to snuggle close in travel? |
60279 | Did not her flames mount to the zenith? |
60279 | Did she not make it? |
60279 | Did you take me to be a human being? |
60279 | Do you call that reproaching you?" |
60279 | Do you hear it? |
60279 | Does she lend her heart to my cry? |
60279 | E Miki- aloalo, e, nawai ka make? |
60279 | E lono anei, e hookuli? |
60279 | E noho ana o Kane- lau- apua[ 418] i ke one lau a Kane; Ninau mai uka,"Nowai he wa''a?" |
60279 | For whom do I make this offering of song? |
60279 | Have not all the men of the village gone over to Niihau? |
60279 | Have you not seen them?" |
60279 | Heaha la ho''i ka hala[ 140] I kapu ai o ka leo, e? |
60279 | Heaha la ka paú[ 422] o ka wahine? |
60279 | Heaha la ka''u makana i ku''u hilahila? |
60279 | How many guests at awa, Sir Crab? |
60279 | I Hookuli ai oe i ka uwalo, e? |
60279 | I kapu, la, i ke aha ka leo, e? |
60279 | Ia wai Maui? |
60279 | In the persistent silence of Pele, upon her fell the leading part of the conversation with Paoa:"What might be the purpose of your pilgrimage?" |
60279 | Is there a compact between us of love? |
60279 | Kai ho''onaue hala ko Keaäu; Kai lu lehua ko Pana- ewa; Ke popo''i a''e la i ke ahu a Lono, e. E lono ana no anei? |
60279 | Make you dumb to my salutation? |
60279 | Nie[ 235] au, Moala, ehia inu awa? |
60279 | Nowai ke kanaenae? |
60279 | O Father Kane, where art thou? |
60279 | Owai Kupukupu? |
60279 | Owai kupua oluna nei, e? |
60279 | Paoa broke the silence:"Shall not Lohiau, then, live again?" |
60279 | Pele roused herself at this and spoke up:"What is that you say? |
60279 | Pele''s looks softened as she contemplated them, tears gathered in her eyes and she said,"What is the thought in the heart? |
60279 | Pray tell me, what skirts wear the women? |
60279 | Shall their murmur forbid you speech? |
60279 | Shall we move in that direction?" |
60279 | Some form of cloud was recognized as his body( Ke- ao- lewa(?)). |
60279 | TRANSLATION The pit- smoke blankets the heavens; Clear is the air in Kilauea, Tranquil Wahine- kapu''s plain-- The Woman, why silent her voice? |
60279 | TRANSLATION We enter the fragrant groves, Hala groves whose heads make a calm, Wild growths by the sea of Kahuku, But what, indeed, are your halas? |
60279 | TRANSLATION Will the orphan now hang his head And weep like a motherless child? |
60279 | That we gathered flowers in the woods? |
60279 | That we strung them and plaited wreaths? |
60279 | The meaning of this wild vision? |
60279 | The question is asked the shining band: Who are the spirits of power up here? |
60279 | The utterance( by the priest?) |
60279 | They were taken aback and asked,"Where are the two young women who were traveling this way? |
60279 | To this unusual demand they replied,"Indeed, do you imagine we will do any such thing as that? |
60279 | Turning to the younger woman, she said,"do you respond to this man''s appeals?" |
60279 | Uï''a kupua o luna nei: Owai kupua o luna nei? |
60279 | What puts such a notion into your head?" |
60279 | When she repeated her questionings and expressions of wonder, he quietly asked,"Have you not seen two women about the place?" |
60279 | Where are you from?" |
60279 | Where art thou, Kane- hoa- lani? |
60279 | Where shall we flee for safety?" |
60279 | Where then was her armor of stone? |
60279 | Where was she from? |
60279 | Where, oh where art thou, my man? |
60279 | Who else would it be? |
60279 | Who in the world is driving you away, as if you had worn out your welcome?" |
60279 | Who is this healer named Kupukupu? |
60279 | Who shall be heir to this Maui land? |
60279 | Why are you not on the way to fetch our man?" |
60279 | Will she consent to turn the canoe- prow and fly back to Kaua''i with him? |
60279 | Will you do this for me?" |
60279 | You still here? |
60279 | [ 129] Lua- wahine,( lua- hine? |
60279 | [ 25] E úi aku ana au I kupua oluna nei, e? |
60279 | [ 371] Kane- hili, a name applied to a part of the plain west of Pu''u- loa[Pu''uloa?]. |
60279 | [ 419] Nowai he wa''a? |
60279 | [ 422] Pau o ka wahine? |
60279 | but who killed him?" |
60279 | said he,"seeing you have but now come from a long journey? |
60279 | that Lohiau died at Haena?" |
60279 | where is Hiiaka?" |
20299 | How is that? 20299 Tell me, were there two different classes of worshipers, one class devoted to the worship of Laka and another class devoted to the worship of Kapo?" |
20299 | What is this new thing of which they babble? |
20299 | What name? |
20299 | Where, indeed, is your spring? 20299 Yes, Haumea was the mother, and Kua- ha- ilo[ 86] was the father:""How about Laka?" |
20299 | 10 Oia kini poai o lakou la paha? |
20299 | 15 Not cold, do you say? |
20299 | 15 The meaning of this short story? |
20299 | 20 Ka lepe hiolo, e? |
20299 | 20 Why are they overturned? |
20299 | 20 Why their banners cast down? |
20299 | 30 One question I put to you: Where, where is the water of Kane? |
20299 | 5 Hiki mai no la ia, na wai e uwe aku? |
20299 | A question I ask of you: Where is the water of Kane? |
20299 | Ah, where am I now? |
20299 | Ahea oe hiki mai? |
20299 | And what of the hyacinth maid, Nymph of the Flowery Land? |
20299 | And what the hour of your coming? |
20299 | Aohe makamaka o ka hale, ua hele oe; Nawai la au e hookipa I keia mahaoi ana mai nei o ka loa? |
20299 | Are its fruits good for food, or does the land we have explored bring forth only poisonous reptiles and the deadly upas? |
20299 | As to beliefs, how much more defensible were the superstitions of our own race two or three centuries ago, or of to- day, than those of the Hawaiians? |
20299 | At this the marionette nods assent, and the hoopaa asks again,"Do you wish him to come to you?" |
20299 | Do not these words form a chain that links the Hawaiian form to the[ Greek: ichthus] of classic Greece? |
20299 | E aha kakou? |
20299 | E ú- i aku ana au ia oe, 15 Aia i- hea ka Wai a Kane? |
20299 | E ú- i aku ana au ia oe, 20 Aia i- hea ka Wai a Kane? |
20299 | E ú- i aku ana au ia oe, Aia i- hea ka Wai a Kane? |
20299 | E ú- i aku ana au ia oe, Aia i- hea ka Wai a Kane? |
20299 | E ú- i aku ana au ia oe, Aia i- hea ka Wai a Kane? |
20299 | Friendless the house, you away; Pray who will receive, who welcome, This guest uninvited from far? |
20299 | He haoloolo e la ke ao, Ke lele la i- luna, i- lalo; Kawewe ka o- ó i- lalo i akea; A ninau o Wakea, 15 Owai nei akua e eli nei? |
20299 | He made a practice of saluting the passers- by and of asking them,"Whither are you going?" |
20299 | Hea mai o Kawelo- hea,[394] Nawai la, e, ke kapu? |
20299 | Her returning, who shall console? |
20299 | Hiki mai no la ia, na wai e uwe aku? |
20299 | Hoi mai no la ia, a ia wai e uwe aku? |
20299 | How, then, could the dramatic efforts of this primitive people, still in the bonds of animalism, escape the note of passion? |
20299 | I ka huluhulu a we''uwe''u, e? |
20299 | I ka punohu,[217] e, a ka la e kau nei? |
20299 | I lono oukou ia wai, e, ua moe? |
20299 | Ia wai ka hope, ka uli o ka wa''a, e ne hoa''lii? |
20299 | Ike oe i ka lola huluhulu, e? |
20299 | Is it a land in which the very principles of art and of human nature are turned upside down? |
20299 | Is it from some demand of poetic or of musical rhythm? |
20299 | Is their contribution so nothingless that one can affirm that the orbit of man''s mind is complete without it? |
20299 | Its language the babble of Bander- log? |
20299 | Ke haoloolo e la ke ao, 20 Ke lele la i- luna, i- lalo; Kawewe ka o- ó i- Ialo i akea; Ninau o Wakea, Owai nei akua e eli nei? |
20299 | Ke haoloolo e la ke ao, Ke lele la i- luna, i- lalo; Kawewe ka o- ó i- lalo i akea; 30 A ninau o Wakea, Owai nei akua e eli nei? |
20299 | Mahea hoi au, a? |
20299 | Mahea la ia i nalo iho nei? |
20299 | Mana- mana lii- lii, Mana- mana heheiao, 20 Ke kumu o ka lepe? |
20299 | May we not think of it as an ancestral memory, an impress, of Asiatic sights and experiences? |
20299 | Nawai ka luau''i? |
20299 | Ninau o Wakea, 55 Owai, nei akua e eli nei? |
20299 | Ninau o Wakea, Owai nei akua e eli nei? |
20299 | Ninau o Wakea, Owai nei akua e eli nei? |
20299 | Noa ia wai? |
20299 | Of what nature were the gods of the old times, and how did the ancient Hawaiians conceive of them? |
20299 | One of the first questions that naturally arises is, Did the men and the women sing in parts or merely in unison? |
20299 | One of the marionettes, for instance, points to some one in the audience; whereupon one of the_ hoopaa_ asks,"What do you want?" |
20299 | One question I ask of you: Where flows the water of Kane? |
20299 | One question I put to you: 15 Where is the water of Kane? |
20299 | Ordinarily she appeared as a powerful fish, but she was capable of assuming the form of a beautiful woman( mermaid?). |
20299 | PALE II Aia i Waimea ku''u haku- lei? |
20299 | Pele was offended and demanded of the two women:"Where is my spring of water?" |
20299 | Pray, what think you? |
20299 | Say what is the key to all this? |
20299 | Seest thou the furzy woodland, The shag of herb and forest, The low earth- tinting rainbow, 5 Child of the Sun that swings above? |
20299 | Tell me, what is it?" |
20299 | The burden Manono is asked to bear, what else is it but the burden of life, in this case lightened by love? |
20299 | The question is asked by Wakea, What god''s this a- digging? |
20299 | The spout- horn, Kawelo- hea, Asks, Who of right has the tabu? |
20299 | There''s a tremulous glance of the eye, The thought she might chance yet to come: 5 But who then would greet her with song? |
20299 | This creature with five buds, what is it but the human hand, the errand- carrier of man''s desire,_ makemake_( verse 11)? |
20299 | This love- song--_mele hoipoipo_--which would be the despair of a strict literalist-- what is it all about? |
20299 | This question I ask of you: Where, pray, is the water of Kane? |
20299 | Thou art the woman, that one your man-- At her coming who''ll greet her with song? |
20299 | Thought you''twas the tree of Hopoe, This tree, whose bloom you would pluck? |
20299 | To do what would you counsel? |
20299 | VI-- Song for the Hula Pele Arranged by H. BERGER[ Music] Is it our ear that is at fault? |
20299 | Wakea asks you to explain, 40 What imp is a- drilling below? |
20299 | Wakea''gain urges the query, 15 What god plies the spade in the ground? |
20299 | Wakea, in earnest, would know, What demon''s a- grubbing below? |
20299 | Wakea, in passion, demands, What god this who digs''neath the ground? |
20299 | Was it because he was tied to a false theology and a false theory of human nature? |
20299 | Was it not this spectacular tournament of the elements that the Hawaiian sought to embody and idealize in his myth of Pele and Kama- pua''a? |
20299 | Was it to celebrate their escape from perils by sea and enemies on land, or was it in token of thankfulness to gods still higher than themselves? |
20299 | What answer does the lovelorn swain receive from the nymph he adores? |
20299 | What artificial influence has come in to produce this result? |
20299 | What child fondly clings to the cliff? |
20299 | What else can this he than that old enemy to man''s peace and comfort, love, passion?] |
20299 | What have you to do with any spring on Kauai?" |
20299 | What if you and I Should our arms enfold, Just to keep off the cold? |
20299 | What is the argument of this poem? |
20299 | What of the people of the plains and of the islands of the sea? |
20299 | What then the solution? |
20299 | When they had reached a safe distance, moved with pity, the men said:"Our orders were to slay; but what hinders you to escape?" |
20299 | Whence comes the sweet morsel? |
20299 | Which? |
20299 | Who shall sit astern, be steersman, O, princes? |
20299 | Who should be the ambassador to bring the youth from his distant home on Kauai? |
20299 | Who was her father?" |
20299 | Who was her grand- sire? |
20299 | Who was it blabbed of the bed defiled? |
20299 | Who would imagine that a Hawaiian would ever picture the god of love as a shark? |
20299 | Who, asks Wakea, the god, Who is this devil a- digging? |
20299 | Why was the offering, the black roast porkling, said to be for Kane, who was not a special patron,_ au- makúa_, of the hula? |
20299 | Within or without shall we stay, friend, 5 Until we have stilled the motion? |
20299 | Your love visits me even here: Where has it been hiding till now? |
20299 | [ 128] I- loko, i- waho kaua la, e ka hoa, 5 I kahi e pau ai o ka oni? |
20299 | [ 412] I aha mai nei? |
20299 | [ 414] Nohea ka ai? |
20299 | [ 416] Ka puana a ka moe? |
20299 | [ Footnote 415: To the question_ Nohea ka ai?_, whence the food? |
20299 | [ Footnote 415: To the question_ Nohea ka ai?_, whence the food? |
20299 | [ Translation] A plover at the full of the sea-- What, pray, is it saying to me? |
20299 | [ Translation]_ The Water of Kane_ A query, a question, I put to you: Where is the water of Kane? |
20299 | _ He Mele no Kane_ He ú- i, he ninau: He ú- i aku ana au ia oe, Aia i- héa ka wai a Kane? |
20299 | _ Mele_ PALE I Auhea wale oe, e ka Makani Inu- wai? |
20299 | and By whom? |
20299 | song of welcome to the_ halau_ 40 WHENCE ART THOU, thirsty Wind? |
20299 | who shall console?" |
56597 | And Kalaunui? |
56597 | And have I your approval as well? |
56597 | And how do you intend to reward the young chief who hazarded his life for you? |
56597 | And nothing more? |
56597 | And should I escape, where will I find you? |
56597 | And the long knife? |
56597 | And what know you,returned the chief,"since you have not inquired?" |
56597 | And what of her father? |
56597 | And when will that be? |
56597 | And who are you? |
56597 | And who was your father? |
56597 | And why not with a woman, if she is your superior and you lack not the courage? |
56597 | And why not? |
56597 | And why, since I do not come as your enemy? |
56597 | And will you undertake to do so? |
56597 | And you? |
56597 | Are you insane? |
56597 | Are you satisfied now? |
56597 | Are you satisfied, priest? |
56597 | But are you not afraid to be the friend of Lono at such a time as this? |
56597 | But can they be found in the mountains? |
56597 | But if disaster is to come to us in the end,suggested Kualu,"why should it not mean defeat and death to me?" |
56597 | But may he not be persuaded to peace? |
56597 | But where will you go for it? |
56597 | But will the stream continue? |
56597 | By whose appointment? |
56597 | By whose hand did he fall? |
56597 | Can its powers be restored? |
56597 | Come,said the woman tauntingly;"do you not see that I am waiting for you?" |
56597 | Did you ever see me before I had the pleasure of embracing you in the water on the coast of Hilo? |
56597 | Did you meet no one? |
56597 | Did you observe her? |
56597 | Did you see the person who left this calabash? |
56597 | Do you fear me? |
56597 | Do you hear, Kalamakua? |
56597 | Do you inquire of me? |
56597 | Do you not know it? 56597 Do you not know that this is a puhonua, sacred to all who seek its protection? |
56597 | Do you promise? |
56597 | Do you require assistance? |
56597 | Does he expect to be able to maintain himself in Hilo? |
56597 | Does it become the high- priest of Kukaniloko to ask such a question? |
56597 | Have auguries of the movement been invoked? |
56597 | Have you found her? |
56597 | Have you no fear of the result? |
56597 | Have you seen her? 56597 How know you that Kalaunui still lives?" |
56597 | How know you that it was not? |
56597 | How know you that the bird was sacred? |
56597 | How long since? |
56597 | How may they be averted? |
56597 | Is he to rot with his spears in Hana? |
56597 | Is it a habit with the chiefs of Oahu to steal their wives? |
56597 | Is it so that you would attempt to countermand my orders? |
56597 | Is it so, indeed? 56597 Is it thus that you seek protection from the anger of an unarmed man? |
56597 | It was a dangerous undertaking,suggested the king, feigning a frown which wrinkled into a smile upon his lips;"had you no fear?" |
56597 | Killed her? |
56597 | Perhaps you are right,said Keoloewa;"but why not abandon Haupu and save yourself, if you are not able to hold it?" |
56597 | Should the high- priest of Pakaalani ask me that question? |
56597 | So do I promise,answered the king;"but will that give me victory?" |
56597 | Tell whom? |
56597 | Then it was left by a woman? |
56597 | Then must we take back the word that Kekuaokalani will have nothing but war? |
56597 | Then why are you here with this palaoa? |
56597 | Then you can do nothing? |
56597 | Then you can find the sacred knife? |
56597 | Then, since we are all in doubt,replied Kelea,"and the winds are blowing landward, why not trust to the gods and follow them?" |
56597 | To Kau? |
56597 | To Puna? |
56597 | We are proud of our blood,he said to Keopuolani,"but who but the gods made kings of our ancestors?" |
56597 | Well, what do you ask for attempting to save the life of your king? |
56597 | Well,said the king, impatiently,"what say the gods?" |
56597 | What are priests and temples for, if not to guard the kingdom against coming dangers? |
56597 | What can I do for you? |
56597 | What evil spirit prompted you to venture here at such a time as this? |
56597 | What know you of the papa? |
56597 | What know you of the will of the gods? |
56597 | What land? |
56597 | What news bring you of Kaoleioku? |
56597 | What wakes you in the night? |
56597 | What was her appearance? |
56597 | What, think you, would be the conditions? |
56597 | When will he return? |
56597 | When will you return? |
56597 | Where and how will I be able to find the shell? |
56597 | Where are his seers? 56597 Where can it be?" |
56597 | Where is Kaala? |
56597 | Where is Kaholekua? |
56597 | Where is Kamaiole? |
56597 | Where is Kamaiole? |
56597 | Where is my mother? |
56597 | Where is the other prisoner? |
56597 | Who are you, and why do you kneel to me? |
56597 | Who calls? |
56597 | Who has seen him? |
56597 | Who is the coming hero? |
56597 | Who is this woman who for three successive days has told us of the lost knife? |
56597 | Who speaks? |
56597 | Who took your sister away from Kau? |
56597 | Why do you not come? |
56597 | Why go farther? |
56597 | Why should I exchange? |
56597 | Why should he wait? |
56597 | Why wait? |
56597 | Why, foolish girl, what could you have done to displease me? |
56597 | Will its voices ever return to it? 56597 Will the bird sing that is covered with a calabash?" |
56597 | Will you be convinced? |
56597 | With the Kiha- pu? |
56597 | Would you throw your life away for a girl? 56597 And the red, sweet hala? 56597 Are you baking the honu? 56597 Are you in the cave of Malauea? 56597 As they are without altars, where would they sacrifice? 56597 As they are without temples, where would they worship? 56597 As they are without the tabu, what to them would be sacred and acceptable to the gods? |
56597 | But a lover looking into the seething gulf of the whirlpool-- what would be to him the sublime conflict? |
56597 | But how was he to be dealt with? |
56597 | But if the trees, which are speechless, do not betray you, why should not I?" |
56597 | But to whom should she entrust the important mission? |
56597 | But what became of Keeaumoku and his family, whose home for years had been among the hills of Hana? |
56597 | But what cared she for clouds, if the sunshine of Lono''s presence was to come at last? |
56597 | But what of Kaahumanu, whose promised lover was to be a chief of renown, and whose husband was to be a king? |
56597 | But what should be the nature of the contest? |
56597 | But what was to be done? |
56597 | But what were Moikeha''s preparations for the race? |
56597 | But where was Lono? |
56597 | But where were they? |
56597 | But which one of them should they select? |
56597 | But whither had he fled? |
56597 | But who can struggle with the gods? |
56597 | But why should I fear death? |
56597 | But would you recognize the plaything who left this calabash, were you to see her again?" |
56597 | Can the kaula find it in the bowels of the black hog? |
56597 | Can you do so?" |
56597 | Can you prompt this animal to recover the Kiha- pu?" |
56597 | Did Kualu divine what it was? |
56597 | Did he expect her at the beach that morning? |
56597 | Do they yet believe in these deities after more than sixty years of Christian teaching? |
56597 | Do you know who I am? |
56597 | Do you sleep with the fish- gods, and must I seek you in their homes among the sunken shores?" |
56597 | Does the kilo see it among the stars? |
56597 | During all the long years of famine and death what had befallen Oluolu, the young wife of Kaakakai, left in the secluded valley back of Hana? |
56597 | Following downward the current, has he not been drawn into the cavern, where he has found Kaala, and may still be living? |
56597 | Had not Pele destroyed his enemies with fire and smoke? |
56597 | Has Kaoleioku sent you to tell us of them?" |
56597 | Has any ill come to her? |
56597 | Has it been hidden away in the earth? |
56597 | Has the great sea swallowed it? |
56597 | Have I in any way displeased you? |
56597 | Have they not been consulted?" |
56597 | He spoke seriously, and Liholiho''s face wore a troubled expression for a moment as he replied:"Then you have not yet lost faith in the gods, Laanui?" |
56597 | His actions were so strange that she said to him, half in alarm:"Are you, indeed, angered with me? |
56597 | How can I live without her? |
56597 | How did the Hawaiian priesthood become possessed of the story of the Hebrew genesis? |
56597 | How should he appear before Liloa, whose will was law and whose frown was death? |
56597 | How were the devotion and kindness of the simple natives requited? |
56597 | If not, then how have the gods been angered?" |
56597 | In what guise should he seek the presence of his royal father? |
56597 | Is Kalamakua better to your liking?" |
56597 | Is it answered now?" |
56597 | Is it so?" |
56597 | Is it strange, then, that he should have yours as well? |
56597 | Is it your will that this be done?" |
56597 | Is this the figure of a king? |
56597 | Kiha calmly regarded his ipukuha for a moment, and then said:"What spirit of evil possesses you? |
56597 | Kualu''s part in the agreement with Kukona was explained at once by Waahia''s presence in Koloa; but what was Kualu to Kukona? |
56597 | Must we search for her among the sharks?" |
56597 | Seating herself, as requested, the king approached, and, in a voice that could not well be overheard, said:"Are you Waahia, the prophetess of Hawaii?" |
56597 | Shall I bring the uwau, The pala and ohelo? |
56597 | Shall I bring you sweet water, The water of the fountain? |
56597 | Shall I pound the kalo of Maui? |
56597 | Shall we dip in the gourd together? |
56597 | The dedication ceremonies were at length concluded; but what was there to offer as a sacrifice? |
56597 | To what processes of creation or isolation do the Hawaiian Islands owe their existence? |
56597 | Waking her granddaughter and pointing to the man, she exclaimed,"Who is this?" |
56597 | Were they raised from the depths of the ocean by volcanic action, as plainly suggested by their formation? |
56597 | What know you of Kaoleioku?" |
56597 | What more could he ask, what more expect should he return to Maui? |
56597 | What pueo ever had such eyes and such a beak?" |
56597 | What says Waahia?" |
56597 | What should one so treated by the gods fear from man?" |
56597 | What was the object of Keeaumoku''s visit to the mourning fleet? |
56597 | Where are the kilos of the temple, who in the heavens saw victory for Kalaunui where I beheld defeat? |
56597 | Where is the long knife of the stranger? |
56597 | Where is the sacred gift of Lono? |
56597 | Who are you, and what brings you here?" |
56597 | Who has found it? |
56597 | Who has seen it? |
56597 | Who is like Kaaialii? |
56597 | Who was this stranger? |
56597 | Whose family should be so honored? |
56597 | Why is it that Manoa is thus blessed with rains, thus ornamented with rainbows, thus cradled in everlasting green? |
56597 | Why suffer longer? |
56597 | Will a voice from the anu answer? |
56597 | Will the gods fulfil their promise?" |
56597 | Will the king favor me by ordering the kapa covering to be removed from the head?" |
56597 | Will the priests of Lono speak? |
56597 | Will your cowardice allow you to answer that question?" |
56597 | Would you bring down upon yourself the wrath of the gods by shedding blood within its walls?" |
56597 | after their tabus have been broken and their priesthood has been dethroned and dishonored? |
56597 | after their temples have been leveled and their gods have been destroyed? |
56597 | and did not one of the fathers of Israel sharpen his knife to slay the body of his son upon the altar of the God of Abraham? |
56597 | and had not Keaulumoku, the inspired bard of Naohaku, chanted the fadeless glory of his triumphs? |
56597 | and, if nothing, what influences had the kaula been able to bring to effect his release upon such conditions? |
56597 | he exclaimed, with assumed astonishment,"shall this be done because Umi lives, and you have seen him with the high- priest of Manini?" |
56597 | or are they a part of a great sunken continent which speculation, sustained by misty tradition, claims once occupied the Polynesian seas? |
56597 | said Lo- Lale, addressing his cousin, who was standing beside the canoe, ready for departure;"do you hear the words of Piliwale? |
56597 | what to see amid the boiling brine the upturned face and tender body of the idol of his heart? |
56597 | where are you? |
56597 | where should Misty Eyes seek for his love in the blinding storm? |
56597 | with a woman?" |
56597 | would you remain here?" |
23758 | Am I to go with you, sir? |
23758 | Americals? |
23758 | Americans? |
23758 | And you say that it was not Noddy? |
23758 | Are we caught? |
23758 | Are you going to Whitestone, or not? |
23758 | Are you going to do that? |
23758 | Are you hurt? |
23758 | Are you sure we ca n''t do anything for him? |
23758 | Below Whitestone? |
23758 | Boy, do you know where the police office is? |
23758 | But Noddy, did you really think I intended to send you to jail? |
23758 | But did Noddy set the building on fire? |
23758 | But how shall I feel all the time? 23758 But where shall I get a dress?" |
23758 | Ca n''t we hide? |
23758 | Ca n''t you see what it means? 23758 Can we go over there?" |
23758 | Can you read, Noddy? |
23758 | Captain McClintock was lost, then? |
23758 | Could n''t you do that after you got back? |
23758 | Could n''t you give me some work to do, to pay my fare up to Albany? |
23758 | Could n''t you save him? 23758 Did you find any of the crew?" |
23758 | Did you know I made an improvement on Miss Bertha''s maxim? |
23758 | Did you know the boat- house was burned up? |
23758 | Did you leave anything in the building in the shape of matches, or anything else? |
23758 | Did you win? |
23758 | Did you_ know_ the boat- house was burned up? |
23758 | Do n''t you ever feel that you have done wrong, Noddy? |
23758 | Do n''t you know how it caught afire? |
23758 | Do n''t you think we ought to live on the island for a year or so, after all the work we have done there? |
23758 | Do n''t you want to be a respectable man, Noddy? |
23758 | Do you do these things, Mollie? |
23758 | Do you hear that, Mollie? |
23758 | Do you hear? |
23758 | Do you know how the fire caught, Noddy? |
23758 | Do you know what they are? |
23758 | Do you know where Mr. Grover lives? |
23758 | Do you mean to say, Ben, that you think Fanny set the boat- house on fire? |
23758 | Do you ride? |
23758 | Do you see that fore- top- gallant yard? |
23758 | Do you see that? |
23758 | Do you think I have nothing better to do than waste my time over a blockhead like you? 23758 Do you think it was Noddy?" |
23758 | Do you think so, Noddy? |
23758 | Do you think you can hold this rope and take in the slack? |
23758 | Do you think you can make a house, Noddy? |
23758 | Does he know anything about a vessel? 23758 Does your father want a boy on board of the vessel?" |
23758 | Does your head ache now, sir? |
23758 | Fanny? |
23758 | Has she gone on deck? |
23758 | Have you got enough, Mr. Arthur De Forrest? |
23758 | Have you heard from Mr. Richard lately, sir? |
23758 | Have you no home? |
23758 | Here, boy, do you want a job? |
23758 | How are you, Ogden? |
23758 | How did it happen? 23758 How did it happen?" |
23758 | How did that happen? |
23758 | How do you know? |
23758 | How happened you to fall overboard? |
23758 | How is Miss Bertha, sir? |
23758 | How is Mrs. Green and the rest of the folks? |
23758 | How is the captain this morning? |
23758 | How many are there in the canoe? |
23758 | How much money have you got? |
23758 | How old are you, Mollie? |
23758 | How should I know it? |
23758 | How should I know, sir, when Ben do n''t know? 23758 I am ready, Noddy; but can you get me the prayer- book?" |
23758 | I do; for do n''t you see it is a good deal worse for me to put you up to such a thing than it was for me to do it myself? 23758 I will, Mollie; but what ails you?" |
23758 | If there is anything about it I do n''t know, why do n''t you tell me? |
23758 | Is Miss Fanny pretty well, sir? |
23758 | Is Mollie out in the cabin? |
23758 | Is he lost? |
23758 | Is it? |
23758 | Is she dead? |
23758 | Is she there now? |
23758 | Is that you, Noddy? |
23758 | Let him tell her-- who cares? |
23758 | Noddy, do you see these great fishes in the water? |
23758 | Noddy? 23758 Noddy?" |
23758 | Now? |
23758 | O, what shall we do? |
23758 | O, you want sunthin to do-- do ye? |
23758 | Of course you do; what of that? |
23758 | Shall I tell her what you wanted me for? |
23758 | So you smoked your pipe among the shavings, and set the boat- house afire-- did you, Ben? 23758 So you wo n''t say anything about it, Ben?" |
23758 | Then what can I do? 23758 Then you wo n''t take this money, Noddy?" |
23758 | There, youngster, do you see that? |
23758 | To sea, Noddy? |
23758 | To- day? |
23758 | Walt to trade? |
23758 | Want to fight? |
23758 | Was that Noddy? |
23758 | We can try-- can''t we? |
23758 | Well, Miss Fanny, have you come to let me out of jail? |
23758 | Well, Noddy, what is it? |
23758 | Well, are you going to take one? |
23758 | Well, how did it catch afire? 23758 Well, what do you want, youngster?" |
23758 | Well, what prevented him from taking hold of you? |
23758 | Well, wo n''t you come? |
23758 | Were there any sharks out there? |
23758 | Were you not afraid of it? |
23758 | What are they, Mollie? |
23758 | What are you crying for? |
23758 | What are you going to do now, Noddy? |
23758 | What are you going to do? |
23758 | What are you in there for, you young sculpin? |
23758 | What are you sorry for? 23758 What are you thinking about, Noddy?" |
23758 | What are you thinking about, Noddy? |
23758 | What can he do? |
23758 | What can we do? |
23758 | What can we do? |
23758 | What can you do with so many as that? |
23758 | What can you do? |
23758 | What could a boy like you do against a mob of Indians? |
23758 | What do you give? |
23758 | What do you mean, Noddy? |
23758 | What do you think they are? |
23758 | What do you want of him? |
23758 | What do you want of me? |
23758 | What do you want of me? |
23758 | What do you want, Noddy? |
23758 | What do you want, my boy? |
23758 | What do you want? |
23758 | What in the world ails you, Miss Fanny? |
23758 | What is it? |
23758 | What is the matter, Mollie? |
23758 | What is your father''s name? |
23758 | What is your name? |
23758 | What kind of business can you do, my boy? |
23758 | What made you say you did not think Noddy set the fire, Ben? |
23758 | What salary do you expect? |
23758 | What scrape? |
23758 | What shall we do? |
23758 | What ship is this? |
23758 | What tricks do you mean? |
23758 | What will they do to you? |
23758 | What will you give me? |
23758 | What''s his name? |
23758 | What''s that, Noddy? |
23758 | What''s the matter, Miss Fanny? |
23758 | What, Noddy? |
23758 | What? |
23758 | What? |
23758 | What? |
23758 | Where do you live? |
23758 | Where do you stay? |
23758 | Where do you want to go, boy? |
23758 | Where is Ben, now? |
23758 | Where is all the liquor, Mollie? |
23758 | Where is he going? |
23758 | Where is he, Noddy? |
23758 | Where is he? |
23758 | Where is it? |
23758 | Where is my father now? |
23758 | Where is she, Noddy? |
23758 | Where is the other boy? |
23758 | Where were you going to sleep to- night? |
23758 | Where? |
23758 | Which way did he go? |
23758 | Who are you? |
23758 | Who could it have been? |
23758 | Who did it? |
23758 | Who did, then? |
23758 | Who do you suppose set it afire, Ben? |
23758 | Who is this little girl with you? 23758 Who was the last person you saw in the boat- house, Ben?" |
23758 | Who will pray for me? |
23758 | Who''s he? |
23758 | Who? |
23758 | Why are you not on deck, attending to your duty? |
23758 | Why did n''t you come down to the Point, as you said you would? |
23758 | Why did n''t you own it before? |
23758 | Why did n''t you tell me about it? |
23758 | Why did n''t you tell me he was here, Bertha? |
23758 | Why did you do such a wicked thing? |
23758 | Why do you say so? |
23758 | Why not? 23758 Why so, Noddy?" |
23758 | Why, Noddy, is that you? |
23758 | Why? |
23758 | Will you do one thing more for me, Noddy? |
23758 | Will you swab up the deck, as I told you? |
23758 | Will you take this boat down there? |
23758 | Wo n''t I? |
23758 | Work and win; but where are you going to get your work? |
23758 | Yes, sir; what was the constable after me for, if not for that? |
23758 | Yes; what will you give for the lot? |
23758 | You do n''t mean to leave Woodville, Noddy? |
23758 | You have seen what I can do-- what will you give me? 23758 You know what Miss Bertha says-- don''t you?" |
23758 | You say he is a good boy? |
23758 | You will not let me do anything for you now? |
23758 | You will not send poor Noddy to prison-- will you? |
23758 | You would n''t shoot them-- would you? |
23758 | Above all things,--and all his doubts and fears culminated in this point,--what would Miss Bertha say? |
23758 | Arthur De Forrest-- how will that suit you?" |
23758 | But was it me that saved you?" |
23758 | Could I see him?" |
23758 | Did n''t I say you would be a rich man?" |
23758 | Did you know the boat- house was burned up?" |
23758 | Do you hear those terrible waves beat against the vessel? |
23758 | Do you know when we sail, Mollie?" |
23758 | Do you think I value my daughter''s life at no more than a hundred dollars?" |
23758 | Do you think the cap''n is going to take his hat off to the cabin- boy?" |
23758 | Do you want to go with us?" |
23758 | How are they going to know anything about it, if you do n''t tell them?" |
23758 | How do you feel, captain?" |
23758 | How shall I look Bertha and my father in the face when I see them?" |
23758 | I suppose you read your Testament every night-- don''t you?" |
23758 | If you cry about it now, what did you do it for?" |
23758 | Is this Mollie, of whom you spoke in your letter?" |
23758 | It that you?" |
23758 | Lincoln?" |
23758 | Noddy had worked hard; but what had he won? |
23758 | Noddy?" |
23758 | O, Noddy, you have been my best earthly friend; for what would my poor father have done if the shark had killed me?" |
23758 | Should you dare to go up there?" |
23758 | That is n''t your real name-- is it?" |
23758 | The worst that I shall do will be to send you----""Is Ben any better than he was?" |
23758 | Was his labor, now that he was to abandon the house, the cisterns, the stores, and the garden,--was it wasted? |
23758 | Was n''t it strange you did n''t take the fever?" |
23758 | What a nice fire it would make!--wouldn''t it, Noddy?" |
23758 | What are you staring at?" |
23758 | What can a small boy like you do with a great boat like that?" |
23758 | What did you go away for?" |
23758 | What did you say that you set the fire for?" |
23758 | What do you think they will do to us, if they do?" |
23758 | What do you want to say a word about it for? |
23758 | What had brought him to Albany? |
23758 | What in the world was she crying about, if she did not wish to get out of the scrape? |
23758 | What would Miss Bertha think to hear you talk like that?" |
23758 | What would she do to him? |
23758 | What would she do to him? |
23758 | What would she do to him? |
23758 | What''s your name?" |
23758 | What?" |
23758 | Where Is your father? |
23758 | Which way did he go?" |
23758 | Why did n''t he get angry, as he did sometimes, and call him a young vagabond, and threaten to horsewhip him? |
23758 | Why did n''t he lay it to me, as he ought to have done?" |
23758 | Why did n''t the old man"pitch into him,"and accuse him of kindling the fire? |
23758 | Why do n''t you row faster, Noddy? |
23758 | Will you still deceive your kind friends? |
23758 | Wo n''t you shake hands with me before I go?" |
23758 | You will take care of my poor father-- won''t you, Noddy?" |
23758 | You wo n''t expose me-- will you?" |
23758 | You would like to-- wouldn''t you?" |
13603 | A loaa ka Lani, heaha ka hana? |
13603 | A owai ka inoa o ko oukou kaikunane? |
13603 | And what is your brother''s name? |
13603 | Are you not my friends here, and through you shall I not get my desire? |
13603 | Auhea oe? |
13603 | E hoi koke olua, owai ko olua kuleana o uka nei, a o wai ko olua makamaka? |
13603 | E kuu Lani e,wahi a Laielohelohe,"pehea la e kaawale ai ia kuko ou mai a oe ae? |
13603 | Ehia oukou ka nui,wahi a Laieikawai,"a pehea ko oukou hiki ana maanei?" |
13603 | Heaha keia, e kuu kaikuahine? |
13603 | How can they be killed by those helpless girls, whom I intended to kill? |
13603 | How many of you are there? |
13603 | Imi owai ka Lani e imi ai? |
13603 | It is lonely here? |
13603 | O my high one,said Laielohelohe,"how can you rid yourself of your passion? |
13603 | Pehea auanei e make ai ia lakou, o na kaikamahine palupalu iho la ka mea e make ai o kau manao ana e make ia lakou? |
13603 | The high one found, what is he to do? |
13603 | To seek what one from the heavens? |
13603 | What have you come up here for? |
13603 | What is this, my sister? |
13603 | Who are you, lawless one, mischief- maker, who have entered my taboo house, the place prohibited to any other? |
13603 | Why not go down and see? |
13603 | You know we men must expect such rebuffs;''a canoe will break on a coral reef;''and if she should refuse, who will tell of it? 13603 [ 33] At the close of this prayer Aiwohikupua stood up with confident face and asked Cold- nose,"Are you ready yet to strike me?" |
13603 | [ 39] Asked Aiwohikupua,Where is the princess''s house?" |
13603 | [ 40]Where are you?" |
13603 | [ 72] The two asked,On what journey, my child, do you come hither?" |
13603 | (?) |
13603 | (?) |
13603 | A heaha hoi ka hana a keia poe kaikamahine e ku poai nei imua o ke Alii?" |
13603 | A heaha ka''u e hana aku ai ia oe?" |
13603 | A heaha kuu hewa?" |
13603 | A heaha la ka manao o kuu Lani e pono ai ke hana?" |
13603 | A heaha la o Hauailiki ia Laieikawai? |
13603 | A hookoia ko ke Alii makemake, a holo aku lakou a malalo o ka pali kahakai, ninau aku la i na wahine e kuiopihi ana,"Heaha kela lehulehu o uka?" |
13603 | A no ka hoopuka ana o ka mea waa i keia olelo, alaila, olelo aku la o Laieikawai,"E ke kamaaina o maua, e hele loa ana anei oe? |
13603 | A no keia hana a ka Makaula, he mea haohao loa ia i ko lakou poe, me ka ninau aku,"E hele ana oe e hoomakaukau nei keia ukana au?" |
13603 | A no keia mea, hoala ae la o Waka i ka moopuna, a ala ae la, ninau iho la ke kupunawahine,"Owai keia?" |
13603 | A no keia mea, hoi aku la o Kahalaomapuana me Moanalihaikawaokele, ninau mai la ka makuakane,"Pehea mai la?" |
13603 | A no keia moe, ninau aku la o Halaaniani,"A heaha iho la ke ano o ia moe?" |
13603 | A no keia olelo a Kauakahialii imua o na''lii, ua hookuiia mai ko Aiwohikupua kino okoa e ka iini nui, me ka ninau aku,"Owai ka inoa oia wahine?" |
13603 | A pau ka uwe ana a lakou, ninau aku la na''lii ia Kauakahialii"Pehea kau hele ana aku nei mamuli o kou hoaa''ia ianei?" |
13603 | A pau ka uwe ana, ninau iho ka makuahine,"Heaha kau huakai i hiki mai ai i o maua nei?" |
13603 | A pau ka uwe ana, ninau iho la,"Nawai ke kama o oe?" |
13603 | A pau ko huakai kaapuni ia Hawaii nei, alaila, hoi aku a hoao olua? |
13603 | A pehea la i hikiwawe ai ka loaa ana o ko''u inoa ia oe e ke Alii?" |
13603 | After the girls had been carried away in the arms of Waka and Kapukaihaoa, Kahauokapaka came back from the fishing, and asked his wife,"How are you?" |
13603 | After the wailing the chief asked his servant:"Why are you living here, and how long have you been gone?" |
13603 | After the wailing the chiefs asked Kauakahialii,"How did your journey go after your marriage with Kailiokalauokekoa?" |
13603 | After this trip around Hawaii, then are you not returning for your marriage? |
13603 | After this, Aiwohikupua again asked Cold- nose,"Are you ready yet to strike me? |
13603 | Again Laieikawai asked,"What are the names of each of you?" |
13603 | Again he asked,"Mine by whom?" |
13603 | Again he asked,"Who are you?" |
13603 | Again the brother asked,"What is your journey for?" |
13603 | Again they asked,"Kaonohiokala found, what is he to do?" |
13603 | Again they asked,"To seek what one from the heavens?" |
13603 | Again they asked,"Who are you?" |
13603 | Aha nalu, aole ou pae iki, heaha la ke kumu o kou pae ole ana?" |
13603 | Aiwohikupua asked his counsellor,"Why is that crowd gathering on land? |
13603 | Alaila, ninau aku la oia i na mea waa,"Heaha iho nei keia hana a olua ia''u i hoi hope ai ka waa? |
13603 | And by reason of this doubt within him he said to his companion,"Where are you? |
13603 | And to the chief''s angry words the seer replied,"Did I not seek diligently and alone for a ruler over all these islands? |
13603 | And what does my high one see fit to do?" |
13603 | Aole anei he uilani, a kani uhu mai i kekahi manawa no ka wahine?" |
13603 | Aole anei oe i hoopalau me Hinaikamalama, ke kaikamahine Alii kaulana o Hana? |
13603 | Are you dead?" |
13603 | Are you not betrothed to Hinaikamalama, the famous princess of Hana? |
13603 | As Cold- nose showed himself off he turned and saw Aiwohikupua and called out,"How are you, stranger? |
13603 | As they left the sisters sitting there, Mailelaulii sang a song, as follows: My divine brother, My heart''s highest, What is our great fault? |
13603 | Asked Halaaniani of the dream,"What is the meaning of this dream?" |
13603 | Asked the chief,"Did you two meet Poliahu?" |
13603 | Asked the grandmother,"Were you pleased with the man?" |
13603 | At the chief''s command the man was summoned before the chief and he asked,"What news do you proclaim aloud with glad face before the assembly?" |
13603 | At the fourth wave, for the first time Laieikawai questioned Halaaniani:"Why do you not ride? |
13603 | At these words of Kauakahialii to the chiefs, all the body of Aiwohikupua pricked with desire, and he asked,"What was the woman''s name?" |
13603 | But what was Hauailiki to Laieikawai? |
13603 | CHAPTER XIX When Hinaikamalama ceased chanting, she said to Aiwohikupua,"Where are you? |
13603 | CHAPTER XXI Malio asked Halaaniani,"What did you dream?" |
13603 | Cold- nose, could the fruit we have never tasted save you? |
13603 | Did n''t I do the same thing here some days ago? |
13603 | Do you no longer love us? |
13603 | Does he not struggle and groan sometimes for the woman?" |
13603 | E pono paha ke lealea?" |
13603 | For this reason his mind was troubled and the chief made oath before all his people:"Where are you? |
13603 | From the Sea- bottom(?) |
13603 | Halaaniani asked his sister,"How was it with you?" |
13603 | Halaaniani came back and told his sister, and his sister said,"We have not won her with the trumpet; shall we try my nose flute?" |
13603 | He asked,"Whose child are you?" |
13603 | He conquers(?) |
13603 | He mokomoko no paha? |
13603 | Heaha ka hala nui? |
13603 | Hele aku la ke kahu o ke Alii, a ninau aku la,"Heaha keia e ke kaikamahine?" |
13603 | Hoi aku la o Halaaniani a kamailio aku i kona kaikuahine, i mai la kona kaikuahine,"Loaa ole ae la ia kaua i ka pu la- i, i kuu hano aku ia loaa?" |
13603 | How are you? |
13603 | How did you get permission to pass here?" |
13603 | How is it with us? |
13603 | I aku la o Laieikawai,"A ina e kau makou ma ko waa, aole anei au hana e ae no makou?" |
13603 | I aku la o Laieikawai,"Ina o oukou kai hiki mai i kela po, alaila, nawai i alakai ia oukou ma keia wahi? |
13603 | I aku o Aiwohikupua i kona Kuhina,"Heaha keia e hoi ole mai nei na kanaka a kaua e hoouna aku nei?" |
13603 | I aku o Laieikawai i kona wahi kahu,"Pehea la kaua e ike ai i ke kane a''u a kuu kupunawahine i olelo mai nei?" |
13603 | I aku o Laieikawai ia Halaaniani,"Auhea kau nalu o kau aua ana iho nei ia''u?" |
13603 | I aku o Laieikawai,"Heaha la?" |
13603 | I ka ha o ko laua nalu pae, akahi no a loaa ka ninau a Laieikawai ia Halaaniani, me ka i aku,"Heaha kou mea e pae ole nei? |
13603 | I keia manawa, olelo aku la o Hinaikamalama ia Aiwohikupua,"Aole anei oe i ike i ke kumu o keia anu o kaua? |
13603 | I mai la kona hoa kuka,"Pehea la ka hoi ka waiwai o ka ona awa? |
13603 | I mai la na kaikuaana,"Heaha la?" |
13603 | I mai la o Aiwohikupua me ka leo huhu,"I nahea makou i ike ai he kaikamahine kau?" |
13603 | I mai la o Laieikawai,"Nau anei ka mea kani lealea i kani mai ai i kela po, a me keia po?" |
13603 | I thought the good of drinking was that admirable scaley look of the skin? |
13603 | Ia Hauailiki e hee la i ka nalu, uwa ka pihe a na kamaaina, a me na kaikuahine o Aiwohikupua: Heaha la ia ia Laieikawai? |
13603 | Ia Ihuanu e hoike ana ia ia iho, huli ae la oia, a ike ia Aiwohikupua, kahea mai la,"Pehea oe e ka malihini? |
13603 | Ia laua ma kahi kaawale, ninau pono aku la ka Makaula i ua wahi kanaka nei,"Ua ike no anei oe i kela kaikamahine mamua au e kamailio nei i ke alii?" |
13603 | Ia manawa, olelo maopopo aku la ke kamaaina me ka i aku,"Auhea oe? |
13603 | In the fifth era is born a creature half pig, half man; the races of men also appear(?). |
13603 | Ina hoi e ae oe e lawe ia''u e like me ka''u e noi aku nei ia oe, alaila, e kau kaua maluna o na waa, a holo aku i Kauai, a pehea ia?" |
13603 | Is this your sisters''fault, that we should go and leave them? |
13603 | Kuiia i kuu piko a pololei i eha kauna kui?" |
13603 | LAIEIKAWAI:"E Waka, e Waka-- e."WAKA:"E-- o, heaha kau o ka po e ala nei?" |
13603 | LAIEIKAWAI:"E Waka, e Waka-- e."WAKA:"E-- o, heaha kau o ka po e ala nei?" |
13603 | LAIEIKAWAI:"E Waka, e Waka-- e."WAKA:"E-- o, heaha la kau o ka po e ala nei?" |
13603 | Laieikawai asked,"Where do you come from?" |
13603 | Laieikawai asked,"Why were you gone four months? |
13603 | MOKUNA XXI Ninau aku o Malio ia Halaaniani,"Heaha kau moe?" |
13603 | Na Kaikamahine a Hulumaniani, aia la, ola kuu inoa, pela wale iho la no ko''u makemake?" |
13603 | Ninau ae la o Kaeloikamalama,"Nawai ke kama o oe?" |
13603 | Ninau ae la,"Nawai ke kama o oe?" |
13603 | Ninau aku la hoi o Halaaniani i kona kai kuahine,"Pehea hoi oe?" |
13603 | Ninau aku la ka Makaula i kekahi poe o ka Aha,"Heaha ka hana a keia Aha? |
13603 | Ninau aku la o Aiwohikupua,"Auhea ka hale o ke Alii Wahine?" |
13603 | Ninau hou aku ka Makaula,"Heaha ka oukou hana maanei?" |
13603 | Ninau hou kela,"Na''u me wai?" |
13603 | Ninau hou kela,"Owai oe?" |
13603 | Ninau hou laua,"Imi i ka Lani owai?" |
13603 | Ninau hou mai la ke kaikunane,"Heaha ka huakai?" |
13603 | Ninau hou no laua"Owai oe?" |
13603 | Ninau hou no laua,"A loaa o Kaonohiokala, heaha ka hana?" |
13603 | Ninau hou o Laieikawai,"Owai ko oukou mau inoa pakahi?" |
13603 | Ninau laua,"Heaha ka huakai a kuu kama i hiki mai ai?" |
13603 | Ninau mai la ke Alii,"Ua halawai olua me Poliahu?" |
13603 | Ninau mai la ke kahuna,"Heaha ka hana a ka puaa imua o''u? |
13603 | Ninau mai la ke kupunawahine,"Ua makemake oe i ko kane?" |
13603 | Ninau mai la o Laieikawai,"Nohea mai oukou?" |
13603 | No ka mea, ke ike lea nei maua i kou kauoha honua ana, me he mea la e hele loa ana oe?" |
13603 | Nolaila, ke ninau aku nei wau ia oe; malaila no anei oukou e lana ai a holo aku?" |
13603 | Not long after they had left they met another man, a bird catcher from the uplands of Olaa;[53] he asked,"Where are you two going?" |
13603 | Now, tell me, shall you float there until you leave?" |
13603 | O ka makemake o ko kakou kupunawahine, o Kekalukaluokewa kuu kane, a pehea? |
13603 | Olelo mai la o Laieikawai,"He haalulu nui ko''u, a me ka weliweli, a pehea la e pau ai kuu maka''u?" |
13603 | Owai kou hoa kamailio e haukamumu mai nei?" |
13603 | Pehea oe? |
13603 | Pela, peia, pehea au e ke aloha? |
13603 | Pii aku la oia a halawai pu me Malio, ninau mai la kona kaikuahine,"Heaha kau o uka nei?" |
13603 | Said Aiwohikupua to his counsellor,"How is it that these warriors who are sent do not return?" |
13603 | Said Laieikawai to Halaaniani,"Where is your wave that you have kept me back here for?" |
13603 | Said Laieikawai to her nurse,"How are we to know the man whom my grandmother said was here?" |
13603 | Said Laieikawai,"I tremble and am astonished, and how can my fear be stilled?" |
13603 | Said Laieikawai,"If we go on board your canoe, do you require anything of us?" |
13603 | Said Laieikawai,"If you were the ones who came that night, who guided you here? |
13603 | Said Laieikawai,"Is the merry instrument yours that sounded here last night and this?" |
13603 | Said Laieikawai,"What was it?" |
13603 | Said the sisters,"What do you mean?" |
13603 | See that rainbow arch? |
13603 | So Kahalaomapuana went back to Moanalihaikawaokele; the father asked,"How was it?" |
13603 | That way, this way, what of me, love? |
13603 | The chief''s wish was obeyed, they went alongside the cliff and asked the women gathering shellfish,"What is that crowd inland for?" |
13603 | The counsellor answered,"What is the good of_ awa_ drinking? |
13603 | The people wondered at his action and asked,"Are you going away that you make these things ready?" |
13603 | The priest asked,"Why do you bring me the pig? |
13603 | The princess''s attendant came and asked,"What is the matter, daughter?" |
13603 | The seer answered,"Where are you? |
13603 | The seer asked again,"What are you doing here?" |
13603 | The seer asked some one in the crowd,"What is this assembly for and why are all these maidens standing in a circle before the chief?" |
13603 | The seer was greatly disturbed at seeing Laieikawai, and when he had reached the spot, he asked Laieikawai and her companions,"Why do you sit here? |
13603 | Then Laielohelohe said to her husband,"Where are you, husband of my childhood? |
13603 | Then Waka wakened the grandchild, and when she awoke the grandmother asked,"Who is this?" |
13603 | Then he asked the paddlers:"What are you doing to me to take the canoe back again? |
13603 | Then the people with him asked,"Where is the canoe which you said was a chief''s canoe coming?" |
13603 | Then the woman told her plainly,"Where are you? |
13603 | Then what are you afraid of? |
13603 | This is the fourth wave you have not ridden; what is your reason for not riding?" |
13603 | This meaning is therefore caught up and employed in the next line--"is constancy then a sin?" |
13603 | This time Hinaikamalama said to Aiwohikupua,"Do you not know any reason for our being cold? |
13603 | Thus far they have unhesitatingly followed his lead; how, then, can he leave them leaderless? |
13603 | Ua make anei oe?" |
13603 | We read: Where is the battle- field Where the warrior is to fight? |
13603 | What business have you up here and who will befriend you?" |
13603 | What can I do for you?" |
13603 | What do you say? |
13603 | What harm had you refused? |
13603 | What have I done?" |
13603 | What is all this that the canoe is kept afloat? |
13603 | What was that to Laieikawai? |
13603 | When Kekalukaluokewa saw the anger in Hinaikamalama''s eyes as she went, then he said,"O Hinaikamalama, will you run to people with angry eyes? |
13603 | When Waka and Kapukaihaoa had taken their foster children away, Waka said to Kapukaihaoa,"How shall we hide our foster children from Kahauokapaka?" |
13603 | When she had ceased wailing, the mother asked,"On what journey do you come hither to us?" |
13603 | When the canoe man had spoken thus, Laieikawai said,"Our host, shall you be gone long? |
13603 | When the counsellors came, her body guard, Laieikawai said,"Where are you, my comrades? |
13603 | When the seer reached Puuloa from Waimea, he saw the rainbow arching over Moolau; then the seer began to wonder,"Can that be the sign I came to seek?" |
13603 | When their wailing was ended he asked,"Whose child are you?" |
13603 | When they met the canoe man, Waka said:"Will you let us get into the canoe with you, and take us to the place where you intend to go?" |
13603 | When they were alone, the seer asked the man directly,"Did you know that girl before about whom you were telling the chief?" |
13603 | Where are you? |
13603 | Where is the prophet?" |
13603 | Why did you not leave us, Leave us at home, When you went on the journey? |
13603 | Why do you not go surfing with the natives of the place?" |
13603 | Why not do so?" |
13603 | Why not throw off your garment, jump in, and join us, then go to the house and sleep? |
13603 | Why waken in the middle of the night?" |
13603 | Why waken in the middle of the night?" |
13603 | Why will you abandon, Abandon us In this desolation? |
13603 | Will you fight a second time with that man of might?" |
13603 | Will you have some fun?" |
13603 | [ 26] I am the best man here, and yet you talk of three from this side; and what are you compared to me?" |
13603 | [ 44] Is constancy perhaps a sin? |
13603 | [ 71] Kaeloikamalama asked,"Whose child are you?" |
13603 | _ Auhea oe?_"where are you?" |
13603 | _ Auhea oe?_"where are you?" |
13603 | asked Laieikawai,"and how did you come here?" |
13603 | auhea oe? |
13603 | auhea oe? |
13603 | did you hear the princess''s refusal?" |
13603 | e hoi olua ano, aole he pono no olua e pii mai ianei, pehea la i aeia mai ai e hookuu mai ia olua?" |
13603 | e kuu Haku, he nui kuu menemene ia oe i kou malama ana i ke kapa i haumia ia''u, a heaha la auanei ka uku o kuu menemene ia oe e kuu Haku?" |
13603 | he opala paha_,"What was Hauailiki to Laieikawai? |
13603 | heaha iho nei hoi keia o ka lana ana o na waa iloko o ke kai? |
13603 | my wife, have you forgotten the days when we dwelt in Kalapana and saw the sun rise beyond Cape Kumukahi? |
13603 | ua hiki anei i ko ai i ao oleia ia makou ke hoola ia oe, e hakaka hou me kela kanaka ikaika lua ole?" |
13603 | where? |
13603 | why waken in the middle of the night?" |
13603 | why waken in the middle of the night?" |