30-i A KATUJRALJST'S iVAXDEIiiyGS 



not know, but in their branches I espied the beautiful scarlet 

 Lory {Eosreti€nhfn),\\hich^ though it liad been long known from 



these islands, I was perhaps the first European to see alive in 

 its own country, and certainly the first to shoot there. During 



the same walk we were surprised to hear from a cocoa-nut tree 

 near the village a most singular bawling, or caterwauling, 

 vhich I thought must proceed from one of the children at 

 play, but which I at last perceived to be produced by a new 

 species of Honey-eater {Pliilemon), whose voice became familiar 

 to us as the earliest and the latest sounds of the day. These 

 observations raised high hopes in my breast as to what I yet 

 might discover, for the sj>ecies I had seen were almost all new. 

 The n^xt sight was less exhihirating— on a tree-clad 

 elevation the half-burned and recently deserted village of 

 Eidol : and from the branch of a hijih tree before us a human 

 arm^ hacked out by the shoulder-blade dangled in the breeze, 

 and at no great distance further were recently-gibbeted human 

 heads and limbs. 



A state of war, we found, existed between, on the one hand, 

 the villagers of liidol burnt out by the Kaleobar people, 

 leagued with Waitidal on the north-western corner, which had 

 taken them in, and with Eitabel, our village; and on the 

 other hand, those of Ivaleubar, one of the largest villages on 

 the island situated on the north-eastern corner, uhich was 

 leagued with Kelaan and with Lamdesar, two other villagc-s 

 on the south-eastern coast. Frequent raids had been made 

 recently by these villages on Eitabel, the wife of whose chief 

 had recently been picked off from the outside of the palisade 

 by a lurking Kaleobar marksman, while many of the villagers 

 showed us their recent wounds received in an attack made a 

 few weeks before our arrival. The bamboo spikes in the 

 ground round the village w^ere set to prevent such clandestine 

 approaches. During the day they were removed from the 

 paths which led to their fields and wells, and at sunset, when . 

 the last man had returned to the village, the pathway was 

 carefully jeset, and the gateway barricaded for the night; it 

 was the duty of the first goer-out in the morning to open 

 the gate and remove the spikes. In this affray it was that 

 the unfortunates, who owned the dismembered limbs we had 

 seen, were captured. These grim mementoes did not inspire 



