Contents 



PAGE 



a bee Holiday throngs A little colloquy 



Typical traits Certain historic differences 



Native honesty Breaking the record ! - 

 Kuma Aoki We start for Okinose - - Beauti- 

 ful pools on Joga "Old Ladies' Homes" 

 The incomparable fisherman Service the 

 final end of training An exquisite gift - - Some 

 Japanese wives Punctilio resolved lijima 



Yoshimi Fukukita Goodby to Japan 



CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT 83 



1. A child of great promise 



2. Stanford's second "Stone Age" Millions to 

 play with Investigation of Hawaiian fisheries 



Hudson's fine work The beginning of a 

 romance Many courtesies Honolulu's mu- 

 seum and aquarium A huge lake of hard- 

 ened lava Mauna Loa Mauna Kea 

 Giant ferns - - Henshaw and the birds - - Per- 

 force a settler Bewildering subspecies 

 Biological friction Hawaiian fishes Tropi- 

 cal but distinct Influence of ocean currents 



The great equatorial stream Further ex- 

 plorations 



3. A critical transition The local aristocracy 

 Other racial groups An obvious situation 

 Democracy grafted on racial oligarchy 



CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE 98 



i. To the South Seas Verdant isles A veritable 

 fairyland Apia on Upolu Pago Pago on 

 Tutuila A marvelous harbor Conventional 

 politics A surprised "national" Adjust- 

 ment by arbitration --Our merry assistants 

 Weird warning The Adlers fate The 

 "Bush" Stevenson's pal Moors' romantic 

 career Vailima Prussian officialism 

 "Miss Jessie" meets the griffin Tusitala's 

 tomb The trail to Lanuto A mountain 



C vii 3 



