Book,  chapter

 1    3,    5|        eat one another. Even the Maori mythology has a legend of
 2    3,    5|          years to wean them from Maori flesh, which they prefer
 3    3,    7|                  CHAPTER VII THE MAORI WAR~GLENARVAN would have
 4    3,    7|        the English invaders. The Maori tribes are organized like
 5    3,    7| propaganda for the election of a Maori ruler. The object was to
 6    3,    7|  Independence, and organized the Maori troops, with great skill.
 7    3,    7|       prophets called on all the Maori population to defend the
 8    3,    7|         Kawhia harbor, where the Maori flag is probably still floating.”~“
 9    3,    8|         any wild animal, but the Maori adequately fills their place,
10    3,    8|     cried Paganel, “a hotel in a Maori village! you would not find
11    3,    8|         rather forego a taste of Maori hospitality. I think it
12    3,    9|       stern.~This man was a tall Maori, about forty-five years
13    3,    9|   individual coat-of-arms of the Maori is an irrefragible proof
14    3,    9|       albatross bone used by the Maori tattooer, had five times
15    3,    9|        to the Upper Waikato. The Maori chief, whose principal warriors
16    3,    9|           He concluded that some Maori chiefs had fallen into the
17    3,   10|       mountain stood a “pah,” or Maori fortress. The prisoners,
18    3,   10|        on which were erected the Maori buildings, and about forty
19    3,   10|         them away,” said he.~The Maori chief stared fixedly at
20    3,   10|         family mausoleum. In the Maori religion the possession
21    3,   10|        tribe, and among them the Maori whose canoe joined that
22    3,   10|       all the while watching the Maori chief.~“I do not know,”
23    3,   10|        perhaps they might.”~“Our Maori custom,” replied Kai-Koumou, “
24    3,   11|         things. According to the Maori doctrine, anyone who laid
25    3,   11|   arrived in the presence of the Maori chief.~“You killed Kara-Tete,”
26    3,   11|    Pakekas?”~“Yes,” answered the Maori.~“You have seen the prisoner,
27    3,   11|           as well as a duty, and Maori history has no lack of such
28    3,   11|    burden, and now, according to Maori ideas, they were to resume
29    3,   11|         stomach according to the Maori usage; then came the funeral,
30    3,   11|       been prepared. An ordinary Maori would have had nothing but
31    3,   13|     Mangles entered. There sat a Maori, wrapped in a large flax
32    3,   13|        he walked straight into a Maori camp, where he met a tall,
33    3,   13|         difficult to establish a Maori library.”~“And what text
34    3,   14|     victims to the flames of the Maori Pluto, and to disappear
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