50 



Report of a Journey Aroioid tlie World. 



for his investigations on lepros}', 

 and who had been my guide on 

 a former visit, was unfortunately 

 absent, but I had the pleasure of 

 greeting his cousin, one of the 

 most distinguished phj^sicians of 

 Hamburg. The Zoologische Gar- 

 ten and Aquarium we did not have 

 time to visit. 



Our passage to Copenhagen, our 

 next halting place, was much more 

 agreeable than it was fourteen 

 years ago. The rather uncomfort- 

 able little ferryboat had been re- 

 placed by a boat for our train from 

 Warnemunde, making the passage 

 most comfortable. We found pleas- 

 ant quarters at the hotel, and the 

 advance in sanitary matters was 

 most pleasing. Of course the 

 Nationalmuseet in the Prindsens- 

 Palais on the Frederikholms-Canal 

 was our Mecca, and there we found 

 the Director, Dr. Sophus Muller, 

 the distinguished antiquarian and 

 ethnologist, who gave us every 

 facility for our study of the collec- 

 tions in his care, so that we made 

 more than one visit to this museum. 

 We found in the courtyard of this 

 old palace a prehistoric tumulus 

 and also casts of others most 

 interesting. The green feather 

 cape (Fig. 46) we were especially 

 looking for was rather disappoint- 

 ing, as it had faded considerably 

 since my last visit ; however, we 

 had every facility for examining 

 the collection, and listed more care- 

 fully than was possible on my for- 

 mer visit the Hawaiian collection 

 [198] 



45. RUDE HAWAIIAN IMAGE. 



