Herman Melville - Omoo
Chapter 69
The Cocoa-Palm
While the doctor and the natives were taking a
digestive nap after dinner, I strolled forth to have a peep at
the country which could produce so generous a meal.
To my surprise, a fine strip of land in the vicinity of the
hamlet, and protected seaward by a grove of cocoanut and
bread-fruit trees, was under high cultivation. Sweet potatoes,
Indian turnips, and yams were growing; also melons, a few
pine-apples, and other fruits. Still more pleasing was the sight
of young bread-fruit and cocoa-nut trees set out with great care,
as if, for once, the improvident Polynesian had thought of his
posterity. But this was the only instance of native thrift which
ever came under my observation. For, in all my rambles over
Tahiti and Imeeo, nothing so much struck me as the comparative
scarcity of these trees in many places where they ought to
abound. Entire valleys, like Martair, of inexhaustible fertility
are abandoned to all the rankness of untamed vegetation. Alluvial
flats bordering the sea, and watered by streams from the
mountains, are over-grown with a wild, scrub guava-bush,
introduced by foreigners, and which spreads with such fatal
rapidity that the natives, standing still while it grows,
anticipate its covering the entire island. Even tracts of clear
land, which, with so little pains, might be made to wave with
orchards, lie wholly neglected.
When I considered their unequalled soil and climate, thus
unaccountably slighted, I often turned in amazement upon the
natives about Papeetee; some of whom all but starve in their
gardens run to waste. Upon other islands which I have visited, of
similar fertility, and wholly unreclaimed from their
first-discovered condition, no spectacle of this sort was
presented.
The high estimation in which many of their fruit-trees are held
by the Tahitians and Imeeose- their beauty in the landscape-
their manifold uses, and the facility with which they are
propagated, are considerations which render the remissness
alluded to still more unaccountable. The cocoa-palm is as an
example; a tree by far the most important production of Nature in
the Tropics. To the Polynesian it is emphatically the Tree of
Life; transcending even the bread-fruit in the multifarious uses
to which it is applied.
Its very aspect is imposing. Asserting its supremacy by an erect
and lofty bearing, it may be said to compare with other trees as
man with inferior creatures.
The blessings it confers are incalculable. Year after year, the
islander reposes beneath its shade, both eating and drinking of
its fruit; he thatches his hut with its boughs, and weaves them
into baskets to carry his food; he cools himself with a fan
platted from the young leaflets, and shields his head from the
sun by a bonnet of the leaves; sometimes he clothes himself with
the cloth-like substance which wraps round the base of the
stalks, whose elastic rods, strung with filberts, are used as a
taper; the larger nuts, thinned and polished, furnish him with a
beautiful goblet: the smaller ones, with bowls for his pipes; the
dry husks kindle his fires; their fibres are twisted into
fishing-lines and cords for his canoes; he heals his wounds with
a balsam compounded from the juice of the nut; and with the oil
extracted from its meat embalms the bodies of the dead.
The noble trunk itself is far from being valueless. Sawn into
posts, it upholds the islander's dwelling; converted into
charcoal, it cooks his food; and supported on blocks of stone,
rails in his lands. He impels his canoe through the water with a
paddle of the wood, and goes to battle with clubs and spears of
the same hard material.
In pagan Tahiti a cocoa-nut branch was the symbol of regal
authority. Laid upon the sacrifice in the temple, it made the
offering sacred; and with it the priests chastised and put to
flight the evil spirits which assailed them. The supreme majesty
of Oro, the great god of their mythology, was declared in the
cocoa- nut log from which his image was rudely carved. Upon one
of the Tonga Islands, there stands a living tree revered itself
as a deity. Even upon the Sandwich Islands, the cocoa-palm
retains all its ancient reputation; the people there having
thought of adopting it as the national emblem.
The cocoa-nut is planted as follows: Selecting a suitable place,
you drop into the ground a fully ripe nut, and leave it. In a few
days, a thin, lance-like shoot forces itself through a minute
hole in the shell, pierces the husk, and soon unfolds three
pale-green leaves in the air; while originating, in the same soft
white sponge which now completely fills the nut, a pair of
fibrous roots, pushing away the stoppers which close two holes in
an opposite direction, penetrate the shell, and strike vertically
into the ground. A day or two more, and the shell and husk,
which, in the last and germinating stage of the nut, are so hard
that a knife will scarcely make any impression, spontaneously
burst by some force within; and, hence-forth, the hardy young
plant thrives apace; and needing no culture, pruning, or
attention of any sort, rapidly advances to maturity. In four or
five years it bears; in twice as many more, it begins to lift its
head among the groves, where, waxing strong, it flourishes for
near a century.
Thus, as some voyager has said, the man who but drops one of
these nuts into the ground may be said to confer a greater and
more certain benefit upon himself and posterity than many a
life's toil in less genial climes.
The fruitfulness of the tree is remarkable. As long as it live it
bears, and without intermission. Two hundred nuts, besides
innumerable white blossoms of others, may be seen upon it at one
time; and though a whole year is required to bring any one of
them to the germinating point, no two, perhaps, are at one time
in precisely the same stage of growth.
The tree delights in a maritime situation. In its greatest
perfection, it is perhaps found right on the seashore, where its
roots are actually washed. But such instances are only met with
upon islands where the swell of the sea is prevented from
breaking on the beach by an encircling reef. No saline flavour is
perceptible in the nut produced in such a place. Although it
bears in any soil, whether upland or bottom, it does not flourish
vigorously inland; and I have frequently observed that, when met
with far up the valleys, its tall stem inclines seaward, as if
pining after a more genial region.
It is a curious fact that if you deprive the cocoa-nut tree of
the verdant tuft at its head, it dies at once; and if allowed to
stand thus, the trunk, which, when alive, is encased in so hard a
bark as to be almost impervious to a bullet, moulders away, and,
in an incredibly short period, becomes dust. This is, perhaps,
partly owing to the peculiar constitution of the trunk, a mere
cylinder of minute hollow reeds, closely packed, and very hard;
but, when exposed at top, peculiarly fitted to convey moisture
and decay through the entire stem.
The finest orchard of cocoa-palms I know, and the only plantation
of them I ever saw at the islands, is one that stands right upon
the southern shore of Papeetee Bay. They were set out by the
first Pomaree, almost half a century ago; and the soil being
especially adapted to their growth, the noble trees now form a
magnificent grove, nearly a mile in extent. No other plant,
scarcely a bush, is to be seen within its precincts. The Broom
Road passes through its entire length.
At noonday, this grove is one of the most beautiful, serene,
witching places that ever was seen. High overhead are ranges of
green rustling arches; through which the sun's rays come down to
you in sparkles. You seem to be wandering through illimitable
halls of pillars; everywhere you catch glimpses of stately
aisles, intersecting each other at all points. A strange silence,
too, reigns far and near; the air flushed with the mellow
stillness of a sunset.
But after the long morning calms, the sea-breeze comes in; and
creeping over the tops of these thousand trees, they nod their
plumes. Soon the breeze freshens; and you hear the branches
brushing against each other; and the flexible trunks begin to
sway. Toward evening the whole grove is rocking to and fro; and
the traveller on the Broom Road is startled by the frequent
falling of the nuts, snapped from their brittle stems. They come
flying through the air, ringing like jugglers' balls; and often
bound along the ground for many rods.