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CHAPTER X CONDITIONS OF LIFE ON THE ISLAND Easter is
a volcanic land, and in the earliest days of the world's history great
lights
and flowing lava must have gleamed across the expanse of water, then
gradually
lessened and died away,, leaving their work to be moulded by wind and
tide. The
island, as the forces of nature have thus made it, is triangular in
shape and
curiously symmetrical. The length of the base — that is, of the south,
or
strictly speaking south-east, coast — is about thirteen miles, and the
greatest
width about seven miles; the circumference, roughly speaking, is
thirty-four
miles. The apex, which is the highest ground, is a volcano over 1,700
feet in
height whose summit is formed of a cluster of small craters; the
eastern and
western angles are each composed of a large extinct volcano. The place
is
geologically young, and the mountains, in contrast to those of Juan
Fernandez,
still preserve their original rounded shape; there are no ravines, no
wooded
precipices, no inaccessible heights, but round the whole coast erosion
is at
work, with the result that, while on the land side the slopes of all
these
three mountains are gradual, on the sea side — that is, in portions of
the
north, east, and west coasts respectively — they have been worn back by
the
power of the waves into imposing cliffs. In the lower districts the
sheets of
lava form a shore-line of some 50 to 100 feet in height, and extend
into the
sea in black, broken ridges. Against this coast of alternating high
cliffs and
jagged rocks the swell of the Pacific is always dashing, and in a high
wind
clouds of white spray first hide, and then reveal, the inhospitable
shore. The
comparatively level and low-lying regions of the island, namely, those
which
are not covered by the three great vol. canoes, consist of the south
coast, and
of two tracts which run across the island on either side. The high
ground which
forms the apex of the triangle is thus divided from that of the eastern
and
western angles respectively. Another level strip, some quarter of a
mile wide
at its broadest, lies in an elevated and romantic position around the
northern
apex between the highest portion of the central mountain and the
precipitous sea-cliff.
This distribution of the level ground is, as will be later seen,
reflected in
the disposition of the various clans which formerly spread over the
island
(fig. 91). In
addition to the three large mountains, there are smaller elevations
some
hundreds of feet in height, generally in the form of cones with craters
distinctly visible. These lesser volcanoes, with one or two exceptions,
may be
roughly said to lie in two lines which radiate irregularly from the
northern
eminence, spreading out from it like fingers and pointing respectively
to the
east and west ends of the south coast. The hills, which may be termed
the root
of the fingers, form part of the high ground, while those equivalent to
the
tips rise out of the low-lying portion, where the east and west
transverse
belts join the southern plain. In some
instances the crater of a mountain has become a lake: when this is the
case the
term "rano" is prefixed to its name. It is quaintly told that one
visitor, considering the volcanic origin, hazarded the suggestion that
"rano"
was equivalent to fire, to which the natives indignantly replied that,
on the
contrary, it meant water. These lakes are almost the only water-supply
of the
island: there is a good rainfall, but no single running stream. Owing
to the
porous nature of the ground the water sinks beneath the surface,
sometimes
forming underground channels from which it flows into the sea below
high-water
mark: thus giving rise to the curious statement of early voyagers that
the
natives were able to drink salt water1 (fig. 124). The lower
portions of the island are composed of sheets of lava, in process of
disintegration, across which walking is almost impossible and riding a
very
slow process; the surface of the mountains and hills is smoother, being
volcanic ash. The whole is covered with grass, which sprouts up between
the
masses of lava and gives the hills a delightful down-like appearance.
Forest
growth has probably never consisted of more than brushwood and shrubs,
and
to-day even those have disappeared. The best
panorama of the island is obtained from the western volcano, by name
Rano Kao
(fig. 24). Below on the left lies Cook's Bay, with Mataveri and the
village of
Hanga Roa, and beyond them the high bleak central ground of the island,
generally known by the name of one of its craters, Rano Aroi. On the
right is
the plain of the south coast, culminating in the eastern headland, a
district
the greater part of which is known as Poike. Just in front of the
headland can
be seen the two peaks of the mountain of Rano Raraku, from which the
statues
were hewn and which is the most interesting place in the island; while
on a
clear day there can be obtained a glimpse of the northern coast and the
sea
beyond. Such is
Easter Island. It bears no resemblance to the ideal lotus-eating lands
of the
Pacific; rather, with its bleak grass-grown surface, its wild rocks and
restless ocean, it recalls some of the Scilly Isles or the coast of
Cornwall.
It is not a beautiful country nor even a striking one, but it has a
fascination
of its own. All portions of it are accessible; from every part are seen
marvellous views of rolling country; everywhere is the wind of heaven;
around
and above all are boundless sea and sky, infinite space and a great
silence. The
dweller there is ever listening for he knows not what, feeling
unconsciously
that he is in the antechamber to something yet more vast which is just
beyond
his ken. The
objects of antiquarian interest proved to be widely scattered. The
statues have
originally stood on a particular kind of burialplace, generally known
as a
"terrace" or "platform." These terraces surround the whole
coast, and each one had of course to be studied. For those at the
western end,
and for certain stone remains on the volcano of Rano Kao, Mataveri was
a most
convenient centre; but the distance from there to the places of
interest at the
other end of the island was unduly great. We therefore decided to avail
ourselves of the offer of the manager and remain for a while at his
establishment,
where Mana left us, and later move
camp. Survey and photography had of course to keep pace with research,
and a
general look-out to be kept for any caves which it might pay to
explore. There
was also the question of getting into touch with the natives and
finding if any
lore existed which threw light on the antiquities: this last, from what
we had
been told in England, was not a very hopeful quest; anyway, it seemed
wiser to
defer it for the moment till we knew something of the language and were
more at
home in our surroundings. The Manager's
house has six rooms, three of which are at the front, and three, having
a
separate entrance, at the back. These last, with a most useful attic,
Mr.
Edmunds kindly put at our disposal, and we supplemented the
accommodation with
tents pitched in the grounds. My own tent, for the sake of quietness,
was on
the western side of the plantation, about a hundred yards from the
house. S.
used to escort me down at night, with a camp lantern, by a little track
through
the eucalyptus trees, see that all was well, put down the light, and
leave me
with the mystery of the island. The site was one dedicated to cannibal
feasts;
immediately behind was the hillock with the grave of the murdered
manager;
while not far away the waves thundered against the cliffs, making in
stormy
weather the ground tremble as if with an earthquake. In the morning
came the
glory of the waking, of being at once tęte
ŕ tęte with air, sunshine, and dewy grass: to those who have not
known the
wonder of these things, it cannot be explained; to those who have
experienced
it, no words are needed. Tent life
is not all "beer and skittles"; Easter is too windy for an ideal
camping-ground; my pitch was sheltered, but even so it seemed at times
as if
the structure would be carried away bodily. To preserve a tent in place
taut
ropes are needed, but if rain descends these shrink, and either burst
with the
strain or tear the pegs out of the ground: the conscientious dweller
under
canvas will, under these conditions, arise from his warm bed, and in
the
pouring deluge race round the tent, slacking off the said ropes. Mine,
like the
stripes of St. Paul, numbered forty save one. Before the end we were
able to
make different arrangements. When we
had been some three and a half months at Mataveri — that is, in the
middle of
July 1914 — we felt that the time had come to begin work on the other
end of
the island. It must be remembered that our original idea was that six
months
would probably suffice for the whole inquiry, and in any case we had no
intention of staying beyond the period which would allow of Mana's
making a second trip to Chile. We
therefore established ourselves at Rano Raraku as the most convenient
site. It
takes about two hours to ride there from Mataveri. The road is made,
like all
those in the island, by simply clearing away the stones, but it is wide
enough
to permit the passage of a wagon. It leads first across the island by
the
western transverse plain till, at Vaihu, the sea is reached, then runs
along the
south coast with its low rocks and continuous line of breaking surf.
Every step
of this part of the way is marked, for those who have eyes to see, with
ruined
burial-places; many of them strewn with the remains of the statues
which have
once been erected upon them. As Raraku is approached, there lie by the
roadside
isolated figures of portentous size, abandoned, it has been thought, in
the act
of removal from the quarries to the terraces. We grew to know by heart
this
road, which led from what we termed our "town establishment," to our
“country house," and have ridden it, together or separately, at all
hours
and in every weather. We were not infrequently detained by business, at
one end
or the other, till too late to save the daylight, and after dark it was
not
easy to keep to the track, even with the help afforded by the sound of
the
breakers. Our ponies gave us no assistance in the difficulty, for as
foals they
had run wild with their mothers, and were, therefore, equally happy
wandering
off among the fields of broken lava. As the “twilight of the dove"
gradually changed to the "twilight of the raven," and the huge
figures loomed larger than ever in the gathering gloom, it seemed that,
if ever
the spirits of the departed revisit their ancient haunts, the ghosts of
the old
image-makers must be all abroad about their works and places of burial.
Rano
Raraku (fig. 45) stands by itself where the fiat ground of the southern
coast
meets the eastern transverse plain, and forms the isolated tip of those
lesser
volcanoes which have been described as the eastern finger. About a mile
to the
eastward rises the high ground of Poike. Raraku scarcely deserves the
name of
mountain, being little more than a basin containing a crater lake; yet
it
curiously dominates the scene. There will be much to tell of it
hereafter; for
the moment suffice it to say that a large number of statues stand on
its lower
slopes, while above are the quarries from which, with very few
exceptions, all
the figures in the island have been obtained. The side nearest the sea
is a
sheer cliff, the extremities of which form the two peaks which are so
characteristic of the mountain. Beneath the cliff is a flow of lava;
here the
French carpenter had managed to put up two iron huts which had been
sent ahead from
England; one was a store, the other formed my one-roomed villa
residence. Their
erection was somewhat of a triumph, as all the bolts had been stolen on
the
way. The rest of the camp, the tent for meals, that of S., and those
for the
servants, were pitched for protection about 50 feet lower down, on the
further
side of the lava flow; but even here, owing to the tearing wind which
howled
round the mountain, their canvas flies had to be tied back and walls
erected
around them (fig. 73). On every hand were the remains of native life
prior to
the removal of the inhabitants to Hanga Roa, the most welcome being a
single
well-grown tree of the sort known in tropical countries as the
"umbrella
tree." It was the only example of its kind on the island, and was of an
age that suggested it had been planted by the early missionaries. The whole
situation was not only one of striking beauty, but brought with it an
indescribable sense of solemnity. Immediately above the camp towered
the
majestic cliff of Raraku, near at hand were its mysterious quarries and
still
erect statues; on the coast below us, quiet and still, lay the
overturned
images of the great platform of Tongariki, one fragment of which alone
remains
on its base, as a silent witness to the glory which has departed. The
scene was
most wonderful of all when the full moon made a track of light over the
sea,
against which the black mass of the terrace and the outline of the
standing
fragment were sharply defined; while the white beams turned the waving
grass into
shimmering silver and lit up every crevice in the mountain above. Easter
Island lies in the sub-tropics, and, if the question of wind be
eliminated, the
climate is as near perfection as possible in this world. There may be,
especially in the winter months, a spell of three or four days of rain,
or a
wind from the Antarctic, when woollen clothes are welcome; and
occasionally, in
the summer, it is preferable to be indoors during the noontide hours;
but with
these exceptions, it is one of those rare localities where it is
possible to be
warm the whole year round, and yet to utilise to the full the hours of
daylight. There are, as might be expected, too many insects;
cockroaches
abound, out of doors and under statues as well as in houses and tents;
when
things were very bad they might even be seen on the dinner-table. I was
calmly
told, with masculine insensibility, that "if I had not naturally a
taste
for such things, the sooner that I acquired it the better"; the only
consolation was that they were of a handsome red variety and not shiny
black.
Flies also are numerous; I have counted two hundred in a bowl of soapy
water,
and six or eight at once on my hand while busy writing; "their tameness
was shocking to me." Mosquitoes, which have been imported, varied in
their
attentions; when they were at their worst it was necessary to wear
head-gear
and dine in gloves. There is said to be no fever in the islands; we had
two or
three attacks, but it may have been "original sin." Once we had a
plague of little white moths, and occasionally, for a short while,
visitations
of a small flying beetle, whose instinct seemed to be to crawl into
everything,
making it safer to stuff one's ears with cotton-wool. On these
occasions dinner
had to be put earlier, owing to Bailey's pathetic complaint that, with
a lamp
burning in the kitchen, business was rendered impossible from the
crowds which
committed suicide in the soup. The lack
of firewood was met by using oil; when, later, we had to economise in
that
commodity, it was supplemented by collecting dried manure. The natives
use
brushwood or anything they can pick up; their manner of cooking, which
is after
Polynesian fashion by heating stones placed in the earth, requires very
little
fuel. The water difficulty was ever present. At the Mataveri
establishment the
supply collected from the roof was generally sufficient; we arrived,
however,
in a dry spell, and one morning the request for water was met by the
information that the "tank was empty"; even Mana, one
felt, had never fallen quite so low. It was consoling to
be informed that "clothes could always be washed in the crater," a
climb of 1,300 feet. At our Raraku camp all the water, except that
which could
be collected on the roof of a tin hut, had to be fetched from the
crater lake; this
rendered us tiresomely dependent on getting native labour. The
rain-clouds are
often intercepted by the high grounds at the south-western end of the
island,
in a manner which is most tantalising to the dweller in the eastern, if
supplies happen to be low. The ranch
supported at this time about 12,000 sheep, 2,000 head of cattle, and
other
livestock; we were generously supplied with milk and could purchase any
quantity of mutton; beef was not often killed for so small a party.
Chickens of
a lean species were sometimes available. Mana
later brought Mr. Edmunds some turkeys which did well. Bananas were
useful,
when in season. Fig-trees thrive, and we had a lavish and most
acceptable
supply at Raraku of this fruit from those planted by the natives prior
to their
removal to Hanga Roa. Vegetables were scarce, as the Manager took no
interest
in his garden, owing to the depredations of the natives, and we had no
time for
their cultivation. Groceries had, of course, been brought with us, and
on our
arrival they were deposited in the locked and strongly built wool-shed
at Hanga
Piko, a small-boat landing between Hanga Roa and Mataveri. Housekeeping
was a
much easier business than on the yacht, but S.'s share of practical
work was
considerably greater, for, beside the initial camp-pitching, all tent
or
kitchen gear that went wrong and every lamp which would not burn made
demands
on his time. In his department also came the stud; we had been kindly
provided
with some of the island ponies, of which there are about five hundred;
as
export is impossible, the value of each animal is put at 5s. When not
in use
the steeds were put out to graze as best they might; and in addition to
the
care of the saddlery, every tethering rope which chafed through against
the
stones was brought for repair to the head of the Expedition. In judging
of
scientific work under such conditions, it must always be borne in mind
how many
hours and days are thus inevitably consumed in practical labour. There was,
luckily for us, the one skilled workman on the island, the French
carpenter who
had made his way from New .Caledonia; his name was Vincent, but he
answered to
the appellation of "Varta" (the figure in fig. 27), the difficulty
was to obtain his services as he was constantly employed on the estate.
One of
our few retainers, Mahanga (fig. 89), was not a native of Easter, but
had come
from the Paumotu Islands; he served faithfully for many months, the
goal in
view being the possession of one of the tin huts, which passed into his
keeping
when we left the island. It was related that having been at one time
afflicted
with some skin disease, he had taken the heroic remedy of plunging into
a vat
in which the sheep were being dipped, with painful but beneficial
results. The
native girls make quite tolerable servants, and I was fortunate in
never being
without one (fig. 29). They take a keen interest in their own clothes
and some
of them are surprisingly good needlewomen; in some of the houses there
are even
sewing-machines. But to obtain labour, whether for camp work or
excavation, was
always difficult, and for a while circumstances rendered it almost
impossible. 1 "I
will only add this one word about the curious way in which they get
fresh water
on some of the coral islands, such as Nangone, where there is none on
the
surface. Two go out together to sea, and dive down at some spot where
they know
there is a freshwater spring, and they alternately stand on one
another's backs
to keep down the one that is drinking at the bottom before the pure
water mixes
with the surrounding salt water." — "Notes on the Maoris and
Melanesians, “Bishop of Wellington: The
Journal of the Ethnological Society, New Series, vol. i, session
1868-9. |