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- 4916
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- 2026-01-30T20:48:18.535Z
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- 4844
- text
- CHAPTER XLIII.
The Tent Entered
By means of thin spaces between the braids of matting, the place was
open to the air, but not to view. There was also a round opening on one
side, only large enough, however, to admit the arm; but this aperture
was partially closed from within. In front, a deep-dyed rug of osiers,
covering the entrance way, was intricately laced to the standing part
of the tent. As I divided this lacing with my cutlass, there arose an
outburst of voices from the Islanders. And they covered their faces, as
the interior was revealed to my gaze.
Before me crouched a beautiful girl. Her hands were drooping. And, like
a saint from a shrine, she looked sadly out from her long, fair hair. A
low wail issued from her lips, and she trembled like a sound. There
were tears on her cheek, and a rose-colored pearl on her bosom.
Did I dream?—A snow-white skin: blue, firmament eyes: Golconda locks.
For an instant spell-bound I stood; while with a slow, apprehensive
movement, and still gazing fixedly, the captive gathered more closely
about her a gauze-like robe. Taking one step within, and partially
dropping the curtain of the tent, I so stood, as to have both sight and
speech of Samoa, who tarried without; while the maiden, crouching in
the farther corner of the retreat, was wholly screened from all eyes
but mine.
Crossing my hands before me, I now stood without speaking. For the soul
of me, I could not link this mysterious creature with the tawny
strangers. She seemed of another race. So powerful was this impression,
that unconsciously, I addressed her in my own tongue. She started, and
bending over, listened intently, as if to the first faint echo of
something dimly remembered. Again I spoke, when throwing back her hair,
the maiden looked up with a piercing, bewildered gaze. But her eyes
soon fell, and bending over once more, she resumed her former attitude.
At length she slowly chanted to herself several musical words, unlike
those of the Islanders; but though I knew not what they meant, they
vaguely seemed familiar.
Impatient to learn her story, I now questioned her in Polynesian. But
with much earnestness, she signed me to address her as before. Soon
perceiving, however, that without comprehending the meaning of the
words I employed, she seemed merely touched by something pleasing in
their sound, I once more addressed her in Polynesian; saying that I was
all eagerness to hear her history.
After much hesitation she complied; starting with alarm at every sound
from without; yet all the while deeply regarding me.
Broken as these disclosures were at the time, they are here presented
in the form in which they were afterward more fully narrated.
So unearthly was the story, that at first I little comprehended it; and
was almost persuaded that the luckless maiden was some beautiful
maniac.
She declared herself more than mortal, a maiden from Oroolia, the
Island of Delights, somewhere in the paradisiacal archipelago of the
Polynesians. To this isle, while yet an infant, by some mystical power,
she had been spirited from Amma, the place of her nativity. Her name
was Yillah. And hardly had the waters of Oroolia washed white her olive
skin, and tinged her hair with gold, when one day strolling in the
woodlands, she was snared in the tendrils of a vine. Drawing her into
its bowers, it gently transformed her into one of its blossoms, leaving
her conscious soul folded up in the transparent petals.
Here hung Yillah in a trance, the world without all tinged with the
rosy hue of her prison. At length when her spirit was about to burst
forth in the opening flower, the blossom was snapped from its stem; and
borne by a soft wind to the sea; where it fell into the opening valve
of a shell; which in good time was cast upon the beach of the Island of
Amma.
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