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- CHAPTER LXXX.
QUEEN POMAREE
It is well to learn something about people before being introduced to
them, and so we will here give some account of Pomaree and her family.
Every reader of Cook’s Voyages must remember “Otto,” who, in that
navigator’s time, was king of the larger peninsula of Tahiti.
Subsequently, assisted by the muskets of the Bounty’s men, he extended
his rule over the entire island. This Otto, before his death, had his
name changed into Pomaree, which has ever since been the royal
patronymic.
He was succeeded by his son, Pomaree II., the most famous prince in the
annals of Tahiti. Though a sad debauchee and drunkard, and even charged
with unnatural crimes, he was a great friend of the missionaries, and
one of their very first proselytes. During the religious wars into
which he was hurried by his zeal for the new faith, he was defeated and
expelled from the island. After a short exile he returned from Imeeo,
with an army of eight hundred warriors, and in the battle of Narii
routed the rebellious pagans with great slaughter, and reestablished
himself upon the throne. Thus, by force of arms, was Christianity
finally triumphant in Tahiti.
Pomaree II., dying in 1821, was succeeded by his infant son, under the
title of Pomaree III. This young prince survived his father but six
years; and the government then descended to his elder sister, Aimata,
the present queen, who is commonly called Pomaree Vahinee I., or the
first female Pomaree. Her majesty must be now upwards of thirty years
of age. She has been twice married. Her first husband was a son of the
old King of Tahar, an island about one hundred miles from Tahiti. This
proving an unhappy alliance, the pair were soon afterwards divorced.
The present husband of the queen is a chief of Imeeo.
The reputation of Pomaree is not what it ought to be. She, and also her
mother, were, for a long time, excommunicated members of the Church;
and the former, I believe, still is. Among other things, her conjugal
fidelity is far from being unquestioned. Indeed, it was upon this
ground chiefly that she was excluded from the communion of the Church.
Previous to her misfortunes she spent the greater portion of her time
sailing about from one island to another, attended by a licentious
court; and wherever she went all manner of games and festivities
celebrated her arrival.
She was always given to display. For several years the maintenance of a
regiment of household troops drew largely upon the royal exchequer.
They were trouserless fellows, in a uniform of calico shirts and
pasteboard hats; armed with muskets of all shapes and calibres, and
commanded by a great noisy chief, strutting it in a coat of fiery red.
These heroes escorted their mistress whenever she went abroad.
Some time ago, the queen received from her English sister, Victoria, a
very showy, though uneasy, head-dress—a crown; probably made to order
at some tinman’s in London. Having no idea of reserving so pretty a
bauble for coronation days, which come so seldom, her majesty sported
it whenever she appeared in public; and, to show her familiarity with
European customs, politely touched it to all foreigners of
distinction—whaling captains, and the like—whom she happened to meet in
her evening walk on the Broom Road.
The arrival and departure of royalty were always announced at the
palace by the court artilleryman—a fat old gentleman who, in a
prodigious hurry and perspiration, discharged minute fowling-pieces as
fast as he could load and fire the same.
The Tahitian princess leads her husband a hard life. Poor fellow! he
not only caught a queen, but a Tartar, when he married her. The style
by which he is addressed is rather significant—“Pomaree-Tanee”
(Pomaree’s man). All things considered, as appropriate a title for a
king-consort as could be hit upon.
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