Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated) (820 page)

The Paumotuan is sincerely attached to those of his own blood and household.  A touching affection sometimes unites wife and husband.  Their children, while they are alive, completely rule them; after they are dead, their bones or their mummies are often jealously preserved and carried from atoll to atoll in the wanderings of the family.  I was told there were many houses in Fakarava with the mummy of a child locked in a sea-chest; after I heard it, I would glance a little jealously at those by my own bed; in that cupboard, also, it was possible there was a tiny skeleton.

The race seems in a fair way to survive.  From fifteen islands, whose rolls I had occasion to consult, I found a proportion of 59 births to 47 deaths for 1887.  Dropping three out of the fifteen, there remained for the other twelve the comfortable ratio of 50 births to 32 deaths.  Long habits of hardship and activity doubtless explain the contrast with Marquesan figures.  But the Paumotuan displays, besides, a certain concern for health and the rudiments of a sanitary discipline.  Public talk with these free-spoken people plays the part of the Contagious Diseases Act; in-comers to fresh islands anxiously inquire if all be well; and syphilis, when contracted, is successfully treated with indigenous herbs.  Like their neighbours of Tahiti, from whom they have perhaps imbibed the error, they regard leprosy with comparative indifference, elephantiasis with disproportionate fear.  But, unlike indeed to the Tahitian, their alarm puts on the guise of self-defence.  Any one stricken with this painful and ugly malady is confined to the ends of villages, denied the use of paths and highways, and condemned to transport himself between his house and coco-patch by water only, his very footprint being held infectious.  Fe’efe’e, being a creature of marshes and the sequel of malarial fever, is not original in atolls.  On the single isle of Makatea, where the lagoon is now a marsh, the disease has made a home.  Many suffer; they are excluded (if Mr. Wilmot be right) from much of the comfort of society; and it is believed they take a secret vengeance.  The defections of the sick are considered highly poisonous.  Early in the morning, it is narrated, aged and malicious persons creep into the sleeping village, and stealthily make water at the doors of the houses of young men.  Thus they propagate disease; thus they breathe on and obliterate comeliness and health, the objects of their envy.  Whether horrid fact or more abominable legend, it equally depicts that something bitter and energetic which distinguishes Paumotuan man.

The archipelago is divided between two main religions, Catholic and Mormon.  They front each other proudly with a false air of permanence; yet are but shapes, their membership in a perpetual flux.  The Mormon attends mass with devotion: the Catholic sits attentive at a Mormon sermon, and to-morrow each may have transferred allegiance.  One man had been a pillar of the Church of Rome for fifteen years; his wife dying, he decided that must be a poor religion that could not save a man his wife, and turned Mormon.  According to one informant, Catholicism was the more fashionable in health, but on the approach of sickness it was judged prudent to secede.  As a Mormon, there were five chances out of six you might recover; as a Catholic, your hopes were small; and this opinion is perhaps founded on the comfortable rite of unction.

We all know what Catholics are, whether in the Paumotus or at home.  But the Paumotuan Mormon seemed a phenomenon apart.  He marries but the one wife, uses the Protestant Bible, observes Protestant forms of worship, forbids the use of liquor and tobacco, practises adult baptism by immersion, and after every public sin, rechristens the backslider.  I advised with Mahinui, whom I found well informed in the history of the American Mormons, and he declared against the least connection.  ‘
Pour moi
,’ said he, with a fine charity, ‘
les Mormons ici un petit Catholiques
.’  Some months later I had an opportunity to consult an orthodox fellow-countryman, an old dissenting Highlander, long settled in Tahiti, but still breathing of the heather of Tiree.  ‘Why do they call themselves Mormons?’ I asked.  ‘My dear, and that is my question!’ he exclaimed.  ‘For by all that I can hear of their doctrine, I have nothing to say against it, and their life, it is above reproach.’  And for all that, Mormons they are, but of the earlier sowing: the so-called Josephites, the followers of Joseph Smith, the opponents of Brigham Young.

Grant, then, the Mormons to be Mormons.  Fresh points at once arise: What are the Israelites? and what the Kanitus?  For a long while back the sect had been divided into Mormons proper and so-called Israelites, I never could hear why.  A few years since there came a visiting missionary of the name of Williams, who made an excellent collection, and retired, leaving fresh disruption imminent.  Something irregular (as I was told) in his way of ‘opening the service’ had raised partisans and enemies; the church was once more rent asunder; and a new sect, the Kanitu, issued from the division.  Since then Kanitus and Israelites, like the Cameronians and the United Presbyterians, have made common cause; and the ecclesiastical history of the Paumotus is, for the moment, uneventful.  There will be more doing before long, and these isles bid fair to be the Scotland of the South.  Two things I could never learn.  The nature of the innovations of the Rev. Mr. Williams none would tell me, and of the meaning of the name Kanitu none had a guess.  It was not Tahitian, it was not Marquesan; it formed no part of that ancient speech of the Paumotus, now passing swiftly into obsolescence.  One man, a priest, God bless him! said it was the Latin for a little dog.  I have found it since as the name of a god in New Guinea; it must be a bolder man than I who should hint at a connection.  Here, then, is a singular thing: a brand-new sect, arising by popular acclamation, and a nonsense word invented for its name.

The design of mystery seems obvious, and according to a very intelligent observer, Mr. Magee of Mangareva, this element of the mysterious is a chief attraction of the Mormon Church.  It enjoys some of the status of Freemasonry at home, and there is for the convert some of the exhilaration of adventure.  Other attractions are certainly conjoined.  Perpetual rebaptism, leading to a succession of baptismal feasts, is found, both from the social and the spiritual side, a pleasing feature.  More important is the fact that all the faithful enjoy office; perhaps more important still, the strictness of the discipline.  ‘The veto on liquor,’ said Mr. Magee, ‘brings them plenty members.’  There is no doubt these islanders are fond of drink, and no doubt they refrain from the indulgence; a bout on a feast-day, for instance, may be followed by a week or a month of rigorous sobriety.  Mr. Wilmot attributes this to Paumotuan frugality and the love of hoarding; it goes far deeper.  I have mentioned that I made a feast on board the
Casco
.  To wash down ship’s bread and jam, each guest was given the choice of rum or syrup, and out of the whole number only one man voted - in a defiant tone, and amid shouts of mirth - for ‘Trum’!  This was in public.  I had the meanness to repeat the experiment, whenever I had a chance, within the four walls of my house; and three at least, who had refused at the festival, greedily drank rum behind a door.  But there were others thoroughly consistent.  I said the virtues of the race were bourgeois and puritan; and how bourgeois is this! how puritanic! how Scottish! and how Yankee! - the temptation, the resistance, the public hypocritical conformity, the Pharisees, the Holy Willies, and the true disciples.  With such a people the popularity of an ascetic Church appears legitimate; in these strict rules, in this perpetual supervision, the weak find their advantage, the strong a certain pleasure; and the doctrine of rebaptism, a clean bill and a fresh start, will comfort many staggering professors.

There is yet another sect, or what is called a sect - no doubt improperly - that of the Whistlers.  Duncan Cameron, so clear in favour of the Mormons, was no less loud in condemnation of the Whistlers.  Yet I do not know; I still fancy there is some connection, perhaps fortuitous, probably disavowed.  Here at least are some doings in the house of an Israelite clergyman (or prophet) in the island of Anaa, of which I am equally sure that Duncan would disclaim and the Whistlers hail them for an imitation of their own.  My informant, a Tahitian and a Catholic, occupied one part of the house; the prophet and his family lived in the other.  Night after night the Mormons, in the one end, held their evening sacrifice of song; night after night, in the other, the wife of the Tahitian lay awake and listened to their singing with amazement.  At length she could contain herself no longer, woke her husband, and asked him what he heard.  ‘I hear several persons singing hymns,’ said he.  ‘Yes,’ she returned, ‘but listen again!  Do you not hear something supernatural?’  His attention thus directed, he was aware of a strange buzzing voice - and yet he declared it was beautiful - which justly accompanied the singers.  The next day he made inquiries.  ‘It is a spirit,’ said the prophet, with entire simplicity, ‘which has lately made a practice of joining us at family worship.’  It did not appear the thing was visible, and like other spirits raised nearer home in these degenerate days, it was rudely ignorant, at first could only buzz, and had only learned of late to bear a part correctly in the music.

The performances of the Whistlers are more business-like.  Their meetings are held publicly with open doors, all being ‘cordially invited to attend.’  The faithful sit about the room - according to one informant, singing hymns; according to another, now singing and now whistling; the leader, the wizard - let me rather say, the medium - sits in the midst, enveloped in a sheet and silent; and presently, from just above his head, or sometimes from the midst of the roof, an aerial whistling proceeds, appalling to the inexperienced.  This, it appears, is the language of the dead; its purport is taken down progressively by one of the experts, writing, I was told, ‘as fast as a telegraph operator’; and the communications are at last made public.  They are of the baldest triviality; a schooner is, perhaps, announced, some idle gossip reported of a neighbour, or if the spirit shall have been called to consultation on a case of sickness, a remedy may be suggested.  One of these, immersion in scalding water, not long ago proved fatal to the patient.  The whole business is very dreary, very silly, and very European; it has none of the picturesque qualities of similar conjurations in New Zealand; it seems to possess no kernel of possible sense, like some that I shall describe among the Gilbert islanders.  Yet I was told that many hardy, intelligent natives were inveterate Whistlers.  ‘Like Mahinui?’ I asked, willing to have a standard; and I was told ‘Yes.’  Why should I wonder?  Men more enlightened than my convict-catechist sit down at home to follies equally sterile and dull.

The medium is sometimes female.  It was a woman, for instance, who introduced these practices on the north coast of Taiarapu, to the scandal of her own connections, her brother-in-law in particular declaring she was drunk.  But what shocked Tahiti might seem fit enough in the Paumotus, the more so as certain women there possess, by the gift of nature, singular and useful powers.  They say they are honest, well-intentioned ladies, some of them embarrassed by their weird inheritance.  And indeed the trouble caused by this endowment is so great, and the protection afforded so infinitesimally small, that I hesitate whether to call it a gift or a hereditary curse.  You may rob this lady’s coco-patch, steal her canoes, burn down her house, and slay her family scatheless; but one thing you must not do: you must not lay a hand upon her sleeping-mat, or your belly will swell, and you can only be cured by the lady or her husband.  Here is the report of an eye-witness, Tasmanian born, educated, a man who has made money - certainly no fool.  In 1886 he was present in a house on Makatea, where two lads began to skylark on the mats, and were (I think) ejected.  Instantly after, their bellies began to swell; pains took hold on them; all manner of island remedies were exhibited in vain, and rubbing only magnified their sufferings.  The man of the house was called, explained the nature of the visitation, and prepared the cure.  A cocoa-nut was husked, filled with herbs, and with all the ceremonies of a launch, and the utterance of spells in the Paumotuan language, committed to the sea.  From that moment the pains began to grow more easy and the swelling to subside.  The reader may stare.  I can assure him, if he moved much among old residents of the archipelago, he would be driven to admit one thing of two - either that there is something in the swollen bellies or nothing in the evidence of man.

I have not met these gifted ladies; but I had an experience of my own, for I have played, for one night only, the part of the whistling spirit.  It had been blowing wearily all day, but with the fall of night the wind abated, and the moon, which was then full, rolled in a clear sky.  We went southward down the island on the side of the lagoon, walking through long-drawn forest aisles of palm, and on a floor of snowy sand.  No life was abroad, nor sound of life; till in a clear part of the isle we spied the embers of a fire, and not far off, in a dark house, heard natives talking softly.  To sit without a light, even in company, and under cover, is for a Paumotuan a somewhat hazardous extreme.  The whole scene - the strong moonlight and crude shadows on the sand, the scattered coals, the sound of the low voices from the house, and the lap of the lagoon along the beach - put me (I know not how) on thoughts of superstition.  I was barefoot, I observed my steps were noiseless, and drawing near to the dark house, but keeping well in shadow, began to whistle.  ‘The Heaving of the Lead’ was my air - no very tragic piece.  With the first note the conversation and all movement ceased; silence accompanied me while I continued; and when I passed that way on my return I found the lamp was lighted in the house, but the tongues were still mute.  All night, as I now think, the wretches shivered and were silent.  For indeed, I had no guess at the time at the nature and magnitude of the terrors I inflicted, or with what grisly images the notes of that old song had peopled the dark house.

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