LIST OF AHUULA. 



73 



It is lined with a woolen fabric which renders it difficult to examine the net. Length, 

 66 inches; neck line, 34 inches; basal line, 156 inches. Deposited in tlie ^^lusenni of 

 Fine Arts, Boston, Mass. PI. XII, lower figure. The photograph was kindly sent 

 by the DireAor, Charles G. Loring, Esq. 



59. Cape of iiwi and 00, tlie main portion occupied by spherical triangles of 

 longer feathers. Lined with a woolen fabric in recent times. It lias been used as a 

 sleigh robe. It belongs to the Joy family and is deposited in tlie Museum of Fine 

 Arts, Boston. Upper figure in PI. XII and Fig. 96. Length, 34.2 inches; width, 89. 5 

 inches. Photographed by the kindness of the Diredlor, Charles G. Loring, Esq. 



60. Cloak of iiwi and 00, in too dilapidated a state to clearly demark the pat- 

 tern; about 60 inches long. It is on a figure intended to represent a Hawaiian warrior 

 in the Musee d'Artillerie Galerie d'Ethnographie at the Hotel des Invalides at Paris. 



FIG. 95. 



FIG. 96. 



61. Cloak of 00 figured with three crescents of differing shapes, and four 

 rhombs, all of iiwi. It is in the Museum at Saffron Walden, Essex, England, and the 

 modern history- is interesting. I give it as kindly furnished by the Cui-ator Mr. G. N. 

 Maynard. It came to the museum in 1S38 with this letter: 



"Sir; — Uuderstan<liiig that the Directors of tlie Saffron W'ahk-n Museum are collecliiig and 

 receiving curiosities of every descriplimi, I beg you will present to them in m\- name the accompany- 

 ing article which I think may t)e deemed worthy a place in their collection, and which apparently 

 tho' a trifle may be of enhanced value when considered as to the circumstances under which it 

 reached this country. The article in (piestion is a Feather Cloak of ceremony and did belong to 

 Rhio Rhio [Liholiho], King of the Sandwich Islands, and was presented by him to my brother-in-law 

 tlie Honourable Frederick P>yng, who had been appointed by Mr. <Janning as chief attendant to their 

 Sandwich Majesties King Rhio Rhio and Uueen Kamehamano [Kaniamalu] when they visited this 

 countrv in 1S24. I have the honor to be, Sir, your obedient and luunble servant, 



"Widdington Redlory, 7th Augu,st, 1838. Comn CAMPBKn.. 



"To Joshua Clarke, Esq., Curator of the Museum Saffron Walden." 



Mr. Maynard adds: "In vSeptember of the year 1S65 Ouecn Emma, widow of 

 King Kamehanieha R\, was on a visit to this country, at which time .she was a guest 

 of Lord Charles Hervey, near here. She then paid this town a visit, being received by 

 the Corporation in state. Among the various objects of interest in the town visited by 



