438 



TAHITI 



very heavily 

 us dry. 



but the good thatch of banana-leaves kept 



November \(^tJi. — At dayHght my friends, after their morn- 

 ing prayer, prepared an excellent breakfast in the same manner 

 as in the evening. They themselves certainly partook of it 

 largely ; indeed I never saw any men eat near so much. I 

 suppose such enormously capacious stomachs must be the effect 

 of a large part of their diet consisting of fruit and vegetables, 



which contain, in a given 

 bulk, a comparatively 

 small portion of nutri- 

 ment. Unwittingly, I 

 was the means of my 

 companions breaking, as 

 I afterwards learned, one 

 of their own laws and 

 resolutions : I took with 

 me a flask of spirits, 

 which they could not 

 refuse to partake of ; 

 but as often as they 

 drank a little, they put 

 their fingers before their 

 mouths, and uttered the 

 word " Missionary." 

 About two years ago, 

 although the use of the 

 ava was prevented, 

 drunkenness from the 

 introduction of spirits 

 became very prevalent. 

 The missionaries pre- 

 vailed on a {<^\v good men, who saw that their country was 

 rapidly going to ruin, to join with them in a Temperance Society. 

 From good sense or shame, all the chiefs and the queen were at 

 last persuaded to join. Immediately a law was passed that no 

 spirits should be allowed to be introduced into the island, and 

 that he who sold and he who bought the forbidden article 

 should be punished by a fine. With remarkable justice, a 



TAHITIAN. 



