SAVAGE ISLAND
AN ACCOUNT OF A SOJOURN
IN NIUÉ AND TONGA
BY BASIL C. THOMSON
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET
1902
PREFACE
NIUÉ, more commonly known as Savage Island, lies 1,000 miles N.N.E. of New Zealand, and 300 miles S.S.E. of Samoa, in the loneliest spot in that part of the Pacific. Its iron-bound coasts tempt no vessels to call for supplies. At rare intervals great four- masted timber-ships pass in the offing; more rarely still schooners call to replenish the stock of the traders and to carry away their copra.
I went to the Niuéans in the name of the Queen and Empress whom the world is still lamenting, and I do not like to think of what our loss means to the people in these remote outposts of her Empire. The oldest native in the South Seas remembers no sovereign's name but hers. She was a real person to them all; a lady who had made them her especial care, had sent the gospel to them, and had bade them lay aside their clubs, and live in peace, order, and equity. Vika, as they called her affectionately—Vika, after whom they named their girl-children—was the benign, all-powerful chief, whose house was built upon the coral strand of Lonitoni (London), opposite the landing-place, where her men-o'-war were moored stem and stern in rows before her door. She read their letters with her own eyes, and had her captains to sit before her on the floor-mats while she gave them messages for the brown folk in far islands. And now Vika, the well-beloved, has left them, mourned by the empire of which they were but the tiniest part. It was hers, and she never saw it; but we, who have seen it—who have, in the humblest way, helped in the making of it—think with heavy hearts of how much hangs upon a name, and of how hard it will be to reassure them, when, as they say of their own dead kings, "kuo hala 'ae langi"—"the heaven has fallen."
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I PAGE 1 CHAPTER II 23 CHAPTER III 34 CHAPTER IV 49 CHAPTER V 69 CHAPTER VI 84 CHAPTER VII 103 CHAPTER VIII 117 CHAPTER IX 133 CHAPTER X 141 CHAPTER XI 152 CHAPTER XII 167 CHAPTER XIII 182 CHAPTER XIV 194 CHAPTER XV 211 APPENDIX 218 229
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
FACE PAGE - "Ship Ahoy!"
6 - The Church at Alofi
14 - A Street in Alofi
14 - The Royal Procession
26 - King Tongia
38 - Hoisting the Union Jack over Savage Island
40 - The Queen of Niué
46 - "Decently clothed from head to foot"
78 - The King and Queen take their Seats
118 - A Grave in Tonga
134 - Uiliame Tungi, the blind Chief of Hahake
164 - George Tubou II., King of Tonga
170 - A Tongan Girl
178 - The Church built by King George I. and the Government Offices wrecked by the Cyclone
186 - The Land-locked Harbour of Vavau
192 - The Colony of Flying Foxes at Kolovai
202 - J. Mateialona, Cousin of the King and Governor of Haapai
212 - The Otuhaka
222 - Map of Niué
At the end

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1927.
The author died in 1939, so this work is also in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 80 years or less. This work may also be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.