A VOYAGE TO 
CHAP, his companions who he was, and that he had been with 
XX. 
■ — r-~> Capt. Cook, and they feemed very glad to have fome of 
July i-'^S 
' their old viiitors again. Mr. Watts learnt from Mona, 
that O'too was ftill living, that he was always called 
Earee l^utti, and then was abfent on a vifit to the eaft- 
ward, but expected to return in four or five days : At the 
fame time, he faid, melTengers had been fent to acquaint 
him of the (hip's arrival. He alfo informed Mr. Watts, 
that Maheinc, the chief of Eimeo, to retaliate the mif- 
chief done him by Capt. Cook, had, after the departure 
of the Refolution and Difcovery from the iflands, landed 
in the night at Oparree, and deftroyed all the animals and 
fowls he could lay hold of, and that O'too was obliged 
to fly to the mountains. He likewife intimated that the 
Attahooroo men joined Maheine in this bufinefs. In- 
deed, it occurred to Mr. Watts, that when here in the 
Refolution, Taha, the chief of that diftridl, threatened 
fomething of the kind in a quarrel with O'too, and 
probably fmothered his refentment only for a time, 
fearful of Capt. Cook revenging it, fliould it come to his 
Friday 1 1, knowlcdgc. The next day, Oediddee agreeably fur- 
prifed them with a vifit on board : he was greatly re- 
joiced to fee them, and enquired after all his friends in 
a very aifedionate manner : He took great pleafure in 
recounting his route in the Refolution, had treafured up 
in his memory the names of the feveral places he had 
been at in her, nor had he forgot his Englifii compli- 
ixients. He informed them that no fl:iip had been at the 
. iflands 
