| Ch.1 p.1 para.3 sent.3 | ʻAʻole kā! | Not so! |
| Ch.1 p.2 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole kā! | Not so! |
| Ch.1 p.2 para.2 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i ola iki kekahi o ia mau hānau ʻana o Mālaekahana; ua pau wale nō i ka pepehi ʻia e like me ka ʻōlelo paʻa a ke aliʻi. | but she could not save them from being killed at birth according to the chief's vow. |
| Ch.1 p.2 para.3 sent.5 | Inā i ʻike ʻoe he kaikamahine, e ʻōmilomilo aʻe au, ʻoiai, ʻaʻole i hoʻokanaka aʻe ke keiki. | if you see it is to be a girl, I will kill it before it takes human shape. |
| Ch.1 p.2 para.3 sent.6 | Akā hoʻi, inā i ʻike mai hoʻi ʻoe i kēia ʻōpū oʻu e hāpai nei a he keiki kāne, ʻaʻole ana.” | But if you see it is to be a boy, I will not do it." |
| Ch.1 p.5 para.2 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole naʻe i hoʻomaopopo nā mea a pau i ke ʻano o kēia ānuenue, akā, ua hoʻomau ʻia kēia mau hailona aliʻi ma nā wahi i mālama ʻia ai ua mau māhoe nei. | yet no one understood the nature of this rainbow, but such signs as attend a chief were always present wherever the twins were guarded. |
| Ch.1 p.5 para.4 sent.3 | Haʻalele kēia i ia wahi, hiki akula kēia i Anahola, hoʻolimalima akula kēia i waʻa e holo ai i Oʻahu nei, akā, ʻaʻole i loaʻa iā ia he waʻa e holo ai i Oʻahu nei. | He left the place and went to Anahola to bargain for a boat to go to Oahu, but he could not hire a boat to go to Oahu. |
| Ch.1 p.6 para.1 sent.1 | A hiki kēia i Waiʻāpuka, kahi i mālama ʻia ai ʻo Lāʻieikawai, ʻike ihola ʻo ia, ʻaʻole he kuleana kūpono o kēlā wahi e noho ʻia ai e nā aliʻi. | He went to Waiapuka, where Laieikawai was being guarded, and saw no place there set off for chiefs to dwell in. |
| Ch.1 p.6 para.2 sent.3 | ʻAʻole hoʻi he makani o kēia luawai e kuleana ai lā hoʻi ka ʻaleʻale ʻana o ka wai, me he mea lā, he mea e ʻauʻau ana a ʻike aʻe nei iaʻu, peʻe iho nei.” | No wind ripples the water on this pool. It is like a person bathing, who has hidden from me." |
| Ch.1 p.6 para.4 sent.5 | Piʻi loa akula ʻo ia a hiki i Kamaoha, a ma laila ʻo ia i moe ai a ao ia pō; ʻaʻole ʻo ia i ʻike i kāna mea i ukali mai ai. | ascended Kamaoha, and there slept over night; but did not see the sign he sought. |
| Ch.2 p.8 para.2 sent.3 | Kainoa paha he pono kāu i kau mai ai ma luna o ko māua waʻa, ʻaʻole kā! | We thought perhaps your coming on board would be a good thing for us. Not so! |
| Ch.2 p.8 para.4 sent.3 | Ua pono nō lā hoʻi ia inā lā hoʻi e hoe ana ʻoe, ʻaʻole kā! | You ought to have taken hold and helped paddle. Not so! |
| Ch.2 p.8 para.5 sent.2 | Inā ʻo kuʻu noho wale ke kumu o ka hoʻi hou ʻana o ka waʻa o kākou i Oʻahu, a laila, ke ʻōlelo nei au ua hewa ka mea i luna o kua ʻiako, no ka mea, he noho wale iho no kāna, ʻaʻole āna hana.” | if you say the reason for your returning to Oahu was my idleness; for I tell you the trouble was with the man above on the seat, for he sat still and did nothing." |
| Ch.2 p.9 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe e hiki. | but he could not reach it. |
| Ch.2 p.9 para.6 sent.1 | I ia manawa a ka mea waʻa i hoʻopuka ai i kēia ʻōlelo “i kōkoʻolua hoe waʻa,” wehe aʻela ʻo Lāʻieikawai i kona mau maka i uhi ʻia i ka ʻaʻahu kapa ma muli o ka makemake o ke kupuna wahine e hūnā loa i kāna moʻopuna me ka ʻike ʻole ʻia mai e nā mea ʻē aʻe a hiki i ko lāua hiki ʻana i Paliuli, akā, ʻaʻole pēlā ko ka moʻopuna manaʻo. | And as the man spoke this word, "a mate to paddle the canoe," Laieikawai drew aside the veil that covered her face because of her grandmother's wish completely to conceal her grandchild from being seen by anyone as they went on their way to Paliuli; but her grandchild thought otherwise. |
| Ch.2 p.9 para.7 sent.1 | I ka manawa naʻe a Lāʻieikawai i hōʻike ai i kona mau maka mai kona hūnā ʻia ʻana e kona kupuna wahine, luliluli aʻela ke poʻo o ke kupuna wahine ʻaʻole e hōʻike kāna moʻopuna iā ia iho, no ka mea, e lilo auaneʻi ka nani o kāna moʻopuna i mea pākūā wale. | When Laieikawai uncovered her face which her grandmother had concealed, the grandmother shook her head at her grandchild to forbid her showing it, lest the grandchild's beauty become thereafter nothing but a common thing. |
| Ch.2 p.10 para.1 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ke kupuna wahine, “ʻAʻole e hiki iaʻu ke wehe aʻe iā ia, no ka mea, ʻo kona makemake nō ka hūnā iā ia iho. | The grandmother said: "I do not uncover her because she wishes to conceal herself." |
| Ch.2 p.10 para.2 sent.5 | Na ʻolua nā mea a pau o loko, ʻaʻole kekahi mea e koe o ka hale nei iā ʻolua. | everything within is yours, not a single thing is withholden from you in the house; |
| Ch.2 p.10 para.4 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ke kamaʻāina, “E ke kaikamahine, ʻaʻole pēlā. | Said the host, "O daughter, not so; |
| Ch.2 p.10 para.4 sent.2 | ʻAʻole au e haʻalele ana iā ʻolua, akā, i manaʻo aʻe nei au e huli i kōkoʻolua noʻu e hoe aku ai iā ʻolua a pae i Lānaʻi.” | I shall not forsake you; but I must look for a mate to paddle you both to Lanai." |
| Ch.2 p.10 para.6 sent.1 | A ʻike ka mea waʻa he mea kaumaha kēia ʻōlelo a Waka i mua ona, ʻōlelo akula ʻo ia i mua o nā malihini, “ʻAʻole oʻu manaʻo e hoʻounauna aku iā ʻolua e kōkua mai iaʻu ma ka hoe pū ʻana i ka waʻa, no ka mea, he mea nui ʻolua naʻu. | The man was displeased at these words of Waka to him. He said to the strangers, "Let me not think of asking you to paddle the canoe; for I hold you to be persons of importance." |
| Ch.2 p.10 para.6 sent.2 | ”Akā, ʻaʻole pēlā ka manaʻo o ka mea waʻa e huli i kōkoʻolua hoe waʻa pū me ia, no ka mea, ua hoʻoholo mua ʻo ia i kāna ʻōlelo hoʻoholo i loko ona e hele e kūkala aku iā Lāʻieikawai a puni ʻo Molokaʻi. | Now it was not the man's intention to look for a mate to paddle the canoe with him, but as he had already determined, so now he vowed within him to go and spread around Molokai the news about Laieikawai. |
| Ch.2 p.11 para.2 sent.4 | ʻAʻole wau i ʻike i kekahi ʻoi o lākou e like me kaʻu mea i ʻike ai, a ke ʻōlelo nei au, ʻo ia ka ʻoi ma mua o nā kaikamāhine kaukaualiʻi o Molokaʻi nei a puni a me kēia ʻaha nō hoʻi.” | but never have I beheld anyone to compare with this one whom I have seen; and I declare to you that she is more beautiful than any of the daughters of the chiefs on Molokai or even in this assembly." |
| Ch.2 p.11 para.3 sent.1 | I ia manawa naʻe a ia nei e kāhea nei, ʻaʻole i lohe pono mai ka ʻaha, no ka mea, ua uhi ʻia kona leo e ka haukamumu leo o ka ʻaha a me ka nēnē no ka hoʻouka kaua. | Now when he shouted, he could not be heard, for his voice was smothered in the clamor of the crowd and the noise of the onset. |
| Ch.2 p.11 para.4 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe au i ʻike leʻa i ke ʻano o ua kaikamahine lā, akā, i loko o ko māua wā kamaʻilio, hoʻopuka maila ke kaikamahine i kona mau maka mai kona hūnā ʻia ʻana. | but I could not see plainly the daughter's face. But while we were talking the girl unveiled her face. |
| Ch.2 p.12 para.5 sent.1 | Hōʻole akula ua wahi kanaka nei ma ka ʻī aku, “ʻAʻole au i ʻike ma mua. | The man denied it and said, "No; I had never seen her before; |
| Ch.3 p.13 para.4 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe ʻo ia i pauaho a hoʻōki i kona manaʻo paʻa. | nevertheless he was not discouraged into dropping the quest. |
| Ch.3 p.15 para.4 sent.1 | Ua nui nō nā lā o ka makāula ma Kaʻuiki, ʻaneʻane makahiki a ʻoi aʻe paha, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ia i ʻike iki i ka hōʻailona mau āna e ukali nei. | Many days the seer remained at Kauwiki, nearly a year or more, but he never saw the sign he had followed thither. |
| Ch.3 p.15 para.6 sent.1 | Iā ia e pule ana a i ka waenakonu o ka manawa, kū maila i mua o ua makāula nei ke kāhoaka o Lāʻieikawai a me kona kupuna wahine, a no kēia mea, hoʻoniau akula ʻo ia i ka pule ʻana; ʻaʻole naʻe i haʻalele kēlā kāhoaka iā ia a hiki i ka māʻamaʻama ʻana. | As he prayed, in the midst of the place appeared to the seer the spirit forms of Laieikawai and her grandmother; so he left off praying, nor did those spirits leave him as long as it was light. |
| Ch.3 p.15 para.7 sent.5 | ʻAʻole e hiki iā ia ke moe i ia pō a ao. | and did not sleep the rest of the night until morning. |
| Ch.3 p.17 para.3 sent.1 | A no kēia ʻōlelo a ka makāula, ʻōlelo maila nā mea waʻa ʻaʻole e hana ʻia kekahi mea pono ʻole ma ia holo ʻana o lākou. | The men promised to do nothing amiss on this trip, |
| Ch.3 p.17 para.5 sent.1 | Ua nui loa nā lā ona ma laila o ka noho ʻana, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ia i ʻike i kāna mea e ʻimi ai, akā, ma kona ʻano makāula, hoʻomau akula ʻo ia i ka pule i ke akua e like me kona mau lā ma Kaʻuiki. | Many days he remained there without seeing the sign he sought; but in his character as seer he continued praying to his god as when he was on Kauwiki, |
| Ch.3 p.17 para.7 sent.1 | Iā ia i hiki ai i Hāmākua, ma lalo o Waipiʻo kona wahi i noho ai ma Pākaʻalana; ʻaʻole naʻe he nui kona mau lā ma laila. | Having arrived at Hamakua, he dwelt in the Waipio Valley at the temple of Pakaalana but did not stay there long. |
| Ch.3 p.18 para.3 sent.1 | A laila, haʻi akula ʻo Kauakahialiʻi i kona hele ʻana penei, “I koʻu hele ʻana mai ʻaneʻi aku, ma muli o ke aloha o ka wahine, a puni Oʻahu a me Maui, ʻaʻole i loaʻa iaʻu kekahi wahine e like me Kaʻiliokalauokekoa nei. | Then Kauakahialii told of his journey as follows: "Seeking hence after the love of woman, I traversed Oahu and Maui, but found no other woman to compare with this Kailiokalauokekoa here. |
| Ch.3 p.18 para.4 sent.2 | Inā e kani aku ka leo o ka ʻaʻo, ʻaʻole wau i loko o ia leo. | When rings the note of the oo bird I am not in that sound, |
| Ch.3 p.18 para.4 sent.3 | A kani aku ka leo o ka ʻalalā, ʻaʻole nō wau i loko o ia leo. | or the alala, I am not in that sound; |
| Ch.3 p.19 para.1 sent.1 | “I ka pō hoʻi āna e kauoha nei, ʻaʻole i hiki aʻe. | "When the night came that she had promised she did not come; |
| Ch.3 p.19 para.1 sent.2 | Oi kali aku mākou a ao ia pō, ʻaʻole i hiki aʻe; ʻo nā manu wale nō kai kani mai. | we waited until morning; she did not come; only the birds sang. |
| Ch.3 p.19 para.5 sent.2 | No laila, haʻi aku ʻo ia i kāna ʻōlelo i mua o Kauakahialiʻi, “Ke haʻohaʻo nei wau i kēia wahine, no ka mea, ʻo wau ka mea nāna i kaʻapuni kēia mau mokupuni, ʻaʻole wau i ʻike i kekahi wahine e kau mai i luna o ka ʻēheu o nā manu, me he mea lā, no Kūkulu o Tahiti mai ia wahine, no loko o Moaʻulanuiākea.” | Then he said to Kauakahialii: "I marvel what this woman may be, for I am a man who has made the whole circuit of the islands, but I never saw any woman resting on the wings of birds. It may be she is come hither from the borders of Tahiti, from within Moaulanuiakea." |
| Ch.3 p.19 para.6 sent.1 | No ka manaʻo o ʻAiwohikupua no Moaʻulanuiākea ʻo Lāʻieikawai, ʻo ia kona mea i manaʻo ai e kiʻi i wahine nāna, no ka mea, ma mua aku o kona lohe ʻana i kēia mau mea, ua ʻōlelo paʻa ʻo ʻAiwohikupua ʻaʻole e lawe i kekahi wahine o kēia mau mokupuni i wahine male nāna. | Since Aiwohikupua thought Laieikawai must be from Moaulanuiakea, he determined to get her for his wife. For before he had heard all this story Aiwohikupua had vowed not to take any woman of these islands to wife; |
| Ch.4 p.21 para.2 sent.2 | Mai kēia lā aku a hiki i koʻu mau lā hope, ʻaʻole loa ana wau e lawe i kekahi wahine o kēia mau mokupuni i wahine male naʻu mai Kauaʻi nei a hala loa i Hawaiʻi. | From this day until my last I will take no woman of all these islands to be my wife, even from Kauai unto Hawaii, |
| Ch.4 p.21 para.2 sent.3 | Inā i ʻōlelo ʻia mai he mau wāhine maikaʻi, ʻaʻole nō hoʻi au e hāʻawi i koʻu kino e komo aku ma ke ʻano kolohe, he ʻole loa nō, no ka mea, he kanaka hana pono ʻole ʻia wau e nā wāhine mai koʻu wā ʻōpiopio mai a hiki i koʻu hoʻokanaka makua ʻana. | no matter how beautiful she is reported to be, nor will I get into mischief with a woman, not with anyone at all. For I have been ill-treated by women from my youth up. |
| Ch.4 p.21 para.6 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe ʻo ia i ʻike maopopo loa aku he wahi helehelena wale nō kāna ʻike lihi ʻana a hikilele aʻela ʻo ia. | but he could not see her distinctly; barely had he seen her face when he waked out of sleep. |
| Ch.4 p.21 para.7 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i loaʻa iā ia ka hiamoe a hiki i ka napoʻo ʻana o ka lā. | but he could not get to sleep until the sun went down. |
| Ch.4 p.21 para.8 sent.1 | I loko o kēia hana a ke aliʻi, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ia i haʻi aku i kēia mea āna e ʻike nei ma ka moeʻuhane. | During all this time he did not tell anyone about what he saw in the dream; |
| Ch.4 p.23 para.1 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ke kuhina o ke aliʻi ma hope iho o ka pau ʻana o ke mele ʻana, “He mea kupanaha! ʻAʻole hoʻi āu wahine a kāua e noho nei, akā, i loko o kāu mele e heluhelu nei, me he wahine lā kāu.” | Said the counsellor to the chief, after he had ended his singing, "This is strange! You have had no woman since we two have been living here, yet in your song you chanted as if you had a woman here." |
| Ch.4 p.23 para.3 sent.2 | ʻŌlelo akula ke aliʻi i kona hoa kūkā, “Ma kēia ʻona ʻawa o kāua, ʻaʻole i waiwai iki.” | Said the chief to his counsellor, "No good at all has come from this awa drinking of ours." |
| Ch.4 p.23 para.5 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ke aliʻi, “ʻAʻole hoʻi paha ʻo ia, ʻo ka ʻike akula hoʻi paha lā iā Lāʻieikawai, a laila, waiwai ka ʻona ʻana o ka ʻawa.” | Said the chief, "Not so, but to see Laieikawai, that is the good of awa drinking." |
| Ch.4 p.23 para.6 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe ke aliʻi i ʻike i ka waiwai o ia hana ʻana, no laila, hoʻopau ihola ke aliʻi i ia hana. | but he gained nothing by it, so he quit it. |
| Ch.4 p.25 para.2 sent.2 | Akā, ua lohe ʻoe i kaʻu hoʻohiki paʻa ʻana, ʻaʻole au e lawe mai i kekahi wahine o kēia mau moku i wahine naʻu.” | but you have heard my vow not to take any woman of these islands to wife." |
| Ch.4 p.25 para.7 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ke aliʻi wahine, “ʻAʻole he maikaʻi o kou kumu pili, e ka malihini. | Said the princess, "Your wager, stranger, is not well — |
| Ch.4 p.26 para.1 sent.1 | A i loko o ko lāua manawa kamaʻilio, hoʻopuka akula ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kona manaʻo i mua o ke aliʻi wahine, “He nani hoʻi ia ua pili aʻe nei koʻu kino me ʻoe, a ua maikaʻi nō, akā, ʻaʻole kāua e launa koke. | During the talk, Aiwohikupua gave to the princess this counsel. "Although I belong to you, and this is well, yet let us not at once become lovers, |
| Ch.4 p.26 para.1 sent.2 | Aia a hoʻi mai au mai kuʻu huakaʻi kaʻapuni iā Hawaiʻi, no ka mea, ua hoʻohiki wau ma mua o kuʻu holo ʻana mai nei, ʻaʻole wau e launa me kekahi o nā wāhine ʻē aʻe. | not until I return from my journey about Hawaii; for I vowed before sailing hither to know no woman |
| Ch.4 p.26 para.1 sent.5 | ʻAʻole e lilo i kekahi mea ʻē aʻe, ʻaʻole hoʻi e hana iki i kekahi mea pono ʻole e keʻakeʻa ai i kā kāua hoʻohiki. | not to consent to any others, not to do the least thing to disturb our compact; |
| Ch.4 p.26 para.1 sent.7 | Inā i hoʻi mai wau, ʻaʻole ʻoe i maluhia, ʻaʻole hoʻi ʻoe i hoʻokō i kaʻu mau kauoha, a laila, ʻo ka pau nō ia.” | If when I return you have not remained pure, not obeyed my commands, then there is an end of it." |
| Ch.4 p.26 para.1 sent.8 | ʻAʻole naʻe kēia ʻo ko ʻAiwohikupua manaʻo maoli. | Now, this was not Aiwohikupua's real intention. |
| Ch.4 p.26 para.5 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole e hiki i kekahi mea ke ʻaʻa mai e kū i mua o Ihuanu, no ka mea, ʻo ko Kohala ʻoi kelakela nō ia ma ka ikaika i ke kuʻikuʻi. | But no one dared to come and stand before Cold-nose, for the fellow was the strongest boxer in Kohala. |
| Ch.4 p.27 para.3 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo maila ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole au e ʻaʻa aku e hakakā me ʻoe ma kāu noi ke ʻole ʻoe e kū mai me nā mea ʻē aʻe ma kou aoʻao. | Answered Aiwohikupua, "I will not accept the challenge without others on your side, |
| Ch.5 p.29 para.1 sent.2 | Ke ʻike maopopo leʻa aku nei wau ʻānō i kēia manawa ʻaʻole e lanakila ana ko kākou aoʻao, a ma kuʻu manaʻopaʻa hoʻi, e lanakila ana ka malihini ma luna o kākou, no ka mea, ke ʻike maopopo akula nō ʻoe ua make loa ko kākou kanaka i ka wēlau wale nō o ko ia ala lima. | I see pretty plainly now our side will never get the best of it; I am sure that the stranger will beat us, for you see how our man was killed by just a push from his hand; |
| Ch.5 p.29 para.2 sent.3 | ʻAʻole anei wau i hana pēlā i kekahi mau lā ma mua aʻe nei ma ʻaneʻi? | Didn't I do the same thing here some days ago? |
| Ch.5 p.29 para.2 sent.6 | Aia a lohe aku ʻoukou ua lanakila ʻo Ihuanu, a laila, hoʻomanaʻo ʻoukou i kuʻu puʻupuʻu iā Kanikapiha, ka ʻai a ke kumu i aʻo ʻole ʻia iā ʻoukou, no ka mea, ke ʻike nei wau ʻaʻole e lanakila mai ʻo ia ma luna oʻu, no ka mea, ua kani ka pola o kuʻu malo i kēia lā.” | When you hear that Cold-nose has conquered, then remember my blow called The-end-that-sang , the fruit of the tree which you have never tasted, the master's stroke which you have never learned. By this sign I know that he will never get the better of me, the end of my girdle sang to-day." |
| Ch.5 p.30 para.2 sent.3 | A lohe ʻo Ihuanu i kēia kaena a ʻAiwohikupua e kuʻi, a laila, leha aʻela nā maka o Ihuanu a puni ka ʻaha, ʻike akula ʻo ia e hiʻi ʻia mai ana kekahi keiki ʻōpiopio loa, a laila, ʻōlelo akula ʻo Ihuanu iā ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole naʻu ʻoe e kuʻi, na kēlā wahi keiki e hiʻi ʻia maila, nāna ʻoe e kuʻi, a ʻo ia kou hoa hakakā.” | When Cold-nose heard Aiwohikupua's boasting challenge to strike, then he glanced around the crowd and saw someone holding a very little child; then said Cold-nose to Aiwohikupua, "I am not the man to strike you; that little youngster there, let him strike you and let him be your opponent." |
| Ch.5 p.31 para.1 sent.2 | ʻŌlelo maila ʻo Ihuanu, “ʻAʻole au e kuʻi aku iā ʻoe. | Cold-nose answered. "I am not ready to strike you; |
| Ch.5 p.31 para.3 sent.3 | I ia manawa, e waiho koke mai ana ʻo Ihuanu i ka puʻupuʻu, hū ka makani ma ka pāpālina o ʻAiwohikupua, ʻaʻole naʻe i kū, no ka mea, ua ʻalo ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, ʻo ia ka mea i hala ai. | Then Cold-nose instantly delivered a blow like the whiz of the wind at Aiwohikupua's face, but Aiwohikupua dodged and he missed it. |
| Ch.5 p.31 para.8 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo akula kona kuhina, “Ua oki ia manaʻo ou, no ka mea, ʻaʻole he huakaʻi mokomoko kā kāua i hele mai nei. | His counsellor answered, "Break off that notion, for we are not taking this journey for boxing contests, |
| Ch.5 p.32 para.3 sent.3 | ʻŌlelo akula ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kahi kamaʻāina, “E hele ʻoe a ʻōlelo aku ʻo wau kekahi e leʻaleʻa me kēlā poʻe, ʻaʻole naʻe e leʻaleʻa me ka poʻe ikaika ʻole.” | Aiwohikupua said to the man, "You go and say I am a fellow to have some fun with the boxers, but not with anyone who is not strong." |
| Ch.5 p.32 para.7 sent.1 | Iā ʻAiwohikupua ma ka ʻaha, ʻōlelo akula ʻo ia i mua o Hāunakā, “ʻAʻole e ʻeha ke keiki Kauaʻi iā ʻoe. | When Aiwohikupua was on the field he said to Haunaka, "You can never hurt the Kauai boy: |
| Ch.5 p.32 para.8 sent.1 | I ia manawa a ʻAiwohikupua e kamaʻilio ana no kēia mau mea, kāhea maila ma waho o ka ʻaha he wahi kanaka i ʻike i ka hakakā ʻana a ʻAiwohikupua me Ihuanu, “E Hāunakā a me ka ʻaha, ʻaʻole ʻoukou e pakele i kēia kanaka. | As Aiwohikupua was speaking a man called out from outside the crowd, who had seen Aiwohikupua fighting with Cold-nose, "Haunaka and all of you gathered here, you will never outdo this man; |
| Ch.6 p.33 para.3 sent.2 | A nānā akula, ʻaʻole he mau waʻa holo mai, no laila, nīnau akula ka poʻe me ia, “ʻAuhea hoʻi nā waʻa āu i ʻōlelo mai nei he mau waʻa aliʻi?” | but could see no canoe coming. Then the people with him asked, "Where is the canoe which you said was a chief's canoe coming? " |
| Ch.6 p.33 para.4 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo aku ka makāula, “ʻAʻole he mau waʻa maoli. | Said the prophet, "Not a real canoe; |
| Ch.6 p.34 para.6 sent.2 | Ua mokumokuāhua ka manawa o ke aliʻi i ke aloha i kāna kauā, no ka mea, ua lōʻihi ka manawa o ka nalo ʻana, ʻaʻole nō hoʻi i ike ʻia ka manawa i nalo ai. | and his heart yearned with love toward him, for he had been gone a long while; he could not tell how long it was since he had seen him. |
| Ch.6 p.35 para.3 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo akula ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, “Ke manaʻo nei wau ʻaʻole kēlā ʻo Lāʻieikawai. | Said Aiwohikupua: "I do not think Laieikawai is there; |
| Ch.6 p.35 para.3 sent.2 | ʻAʻole nō nona kēlā ānuenue, no ka mea, he mea mau nō ia no nā wahi ua a pau, he piʻo nō ke ānuenue. | that is not her rainbow, for rainbows are common to all rainy places. |
| Ch.6 p.36 para.5 sent.4 | Kuhi iho nei wau he wahine a lohe mai i ke aʻo, ʻaʻole kā! | I supposed her just an ordinary woman. Not so! |
| Ch.6 p.36 para.5 sent.5 | I ʻike aku nei ka hana i ka hale o ke aliʻi wahine, ʻaʻole nō ona lua, no laila, ʻānō, e hoʻi kāua me ka launa ʻole.” | The princess's house has no equal for workmanship: therefore, let us return without making ourselves known." |
| Ch.6 p.36 para.7 sent.2 | “ʻAʻole e hiki iā kāua ke hele e hālāwai me ke aliʻi wahine, a ʻaʻole nō hoʻi e loaʻa, no ka mea, ke ʻike nei wau, ua ʻano ʻē loa ka hale. | "We will not meet the princess, and we shall certainly not win her, for I see now the
house is no ordinary one. |
| Ch.6 p.36 para.7 sent.3 | Ua lawe mai nei au i koʻu ʻahuʻula i makana e hāʻawi aku ai i ke aliʻi wahine o Paliuli nei, akā, ke nānā aku nei wau, ʻo ke pili ihola ia o ka hale o ke aliʻi, no ka mea, ua ʻike nō ʻoe, ʻo kēia mea he ʻahuʻula, ʻaʻole ia e loaʻa i nā mea ʻē aʻe. | I have brought my cloak wrought with feathers for a gift to the princess of Paliuli and I behold them here as thatch for the princess's house; yet you know, for that matter,
even a cloak of feathers |
| Ch.7 p.37 para.1 sent.2 | Ma ia hoʻi ʻana, ʻaʻole naʻe i haʻi aku ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kekahi kumu o ka hoʻi ʻana, aia i ka hiki ʻana i Kauaʻi. | On the way back Aiwohikupua would not say why he was returning until they reached Kauai; |
| Ch.7 p.38 para.4 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ka wahine, “ʻAʻole wau he wahine no kēia pali. | The woman answered, "I am not mistress of this coast. |
| Ch.7 p.38 para.6 sent.1 | “A no kāu noi, e ke Aliʻi,” wahi a Poliʻahu, “e lawe wau iā ʻoe i kāne naʻu, a no laila, ke haʻi aku nei wau iā ʻoe me ka nīnau aku, ʻaʻole anei ʻo ʻoe ke aliʻi i kū i luna a hoʻohiki ma ka inoa o kou mau akua ʻaʻole ʻoe e lawe i hoʻokahi wahine o kēia mau mokupuni mai Hawaiʻi nei a Kauaʻi; aia kāu wahine lawe no loko mai o Moaʻulanuiākea? | "As to what the chief desires of me," said Poliahu. "I will take you for my husband; and now let me ask you, are you not the chief who stood up and vowed in the name of your gods not to take any woman of these islands from Hawaii to Kauai to wife — only a woman who conies from Moaulanuiakea? |
| Ch.7 p.38 para.6 sent.2 | ʻAʻole anei ʻoe i hoʻopalau me Hinaikamalama, ke kaikamahine aliʻi kaulana o Hāna? | Are you not betrothed to Hinaikamalama, the famous princess of Hana? |
| Ch.7 p.38 para.6 sent.4 | A no kāu noi mai e lawe kāua iā kāua i mau mea hoʻohui, no laila, ke haʻi aku nei wau iā ʻoe, aia a hoʻopau ʻoe i kāu hoʻohiki mua, a laila, ʻaʻole naʻu e lawe iā ʻoe. | And as to your wishing our union, I assure you, until you have made an end of your first vow it is not my part to take you, |
| Ch.7 p.38 para.8 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole oʻu mea nāna i haʻi mai i kēia mau mea, e ke Aliʻi kāne. | "No one has told me these things, O chief; |
| Ch.7 p.39 para.1 sent.2 | “ʻAʻole kāua e holo pū i Kauaʻi,” wahi a ka wahine, “akā, e kau wau me ʻoukou a Kohala, hoʻi mai wau, a laila, hoʻi ʻoukou.” | "We shall not go together to Kauai." said the woman, "But I will go on board with you to Kohala, then I will return, while you go on." |
| Ch.7 p.39 para.2 sent.3 | ʻAʻole ʻo nā kānaka, ua akāka ko lākou wahi. | fix bounds between us. |
| Ch.7 p.39 para.2 sent.4 | Mai hoʻopā mai ʻoukou iaʻu, ʻaʻole hoʻi au e hoʻopā iā ʻoukou a hiki wale i Kohala. | You must not touch me, I will not touch you until we reach Kohala: |
| Ch.7 p.39 para.2 sent.7 | I ia holo ʻana o lākou a hiki i Kohala, ʻaʻole i hana ʻia kekahi mea iho i waena o lākou. | As they sailed and came to Kohala they did not touch each other. |
| Ch.7 p.39 para.3 sent.1 | Iā lākou ma Kohala a hiki i ka lā i haʻalele ai ʻo ʻAiwohikupua mā iā Kohala, lawe aʻela ʻo Poliʻahu i kona kapa hau, a hāʻawi akula iā ʻAiwohikupua me ka ʻōlelo aku, “ʻO kuʻu kapa hau he kapa i pāpā loa ʻia e koʻu mau mākua ʻaʻole e lilo i kekahi mea ʻē aʻe; iaʻu wale iho nō. | They reached Kohala, and on the day when Aiwohikupua's party left, Poliahu took her garment of snow and gave it to Aiwohikupua, saying. "Here is my snow mantle, the mantle my parents strictly forbade my giving to anyone else; it was to be for myself alone; |
| Ch.8 p.41 para.2 sent.3 | Mahamaha mai nei kēia i ka ʻike ʻana mai nei iā ʻoukou, kainoa lā hoʻi he holo mai a pae aʻe, ʻaʻole kā! | Joyous was I at the sight of you, believing you were coming to land. Not so! |
| Ch.8 p.41 para.4 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole ʻoukou e hiki,” wahi a ka wahine “no ka mea, e kauoha nō wau i ka ilāmuku e hoʻopaʻa iā ʻoe. | "You can not." said the woman. "for I will order the executioner
to hold you fast; |
| Ch.8 p.41 para.5 sent.1 | “E ke aliʻi wahine, ʻaʻole pēlā,” wahi a ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻaʻole au i hoʻopau i kā kāua hoʻohiki, ke mau nei nō ia. | "O princess, not so!" said Aiwohikupua. "It is not to end our vow — that still holds; |
| Ch.8 p.41 para.5 sent.2 | ʻAʻole nō i hiki i ka manawa e hoʻokō ʻia ai ia hoʻohiki a kāua, no ka mea, ua haʻi mua aku wau iā ʻoe, aia a puni ʻo Hawaiʻi iaʻu, a laila, hoʻokō ʻia kou kumu pili, e ke Aliʻi wahine. | but the time has not come for its fulfillment, for I said to you. * When I have sailed about Hawaii then the princess's bet shall be paid: |
| Ch.8 p.41 para.5 sent.3 | No laila, holo aku nei wau me ka manaʻo e puni ʻo Hawaiʻi, ʻaʻole naʻe i puni. | now, I went meaning to sail about Hawaii, but did not: |
| Ch.8 p.43 para.2 sent.1 | A hiki lākou i Kauaʻi ma ka napoʻo ʻana o ka lā a hālāwai me nā kaikuahine, i ia manawa ka hoʻopuka ʻana i ʻōlelo i kona mau kaikuahine penei, “Iaʻu i hele aku nei i kaʻu huakaʻi hele, ua haʻohaʻo paha ʻoukou, no ka mea, ʻaʻole wau i haʻi aku iā ʻoukou i ke kumu o ia hele ʻana. | Aiwohikupua reached Kauai at sunset and met his sisters. Then he spoke thus to his sisters: "Perhaps you wondered when I went on my journey, because I did not tell you my reason, |
| Ch.8 p.43 para.2 sent.2 | ʻAʻole nō hoʻi wau i haʻi aku i kaʻu wahi e hele ai, a no laila, ke haʻi malū aku nei wau iā ʻoukou, e oʻu mau kaikuahine, ʻo kākou wale, i Hawaiʻi aku nei mākou i nalo iho nei. | not even the place where I was to go; and now I tell it to you in secret, my sisters, to you alone. To Hawaii I disappeared |
| Ch.8 p.43 para.2 sent.4 | I ka hele ʻana aku nei hoʻi, ʻaʻole nō hoʻi i kana mai a ke ʻano ʻē o ka wahine. | But when I came there I did not get sight of the woman's face; |
| Ch.8 p.43 para.2 sent.5 | ʻAʻole naʻe au i ʻike aku iā Lāʻieikawai, akā, ʻo ka hale kaʻu i ʻike maka aku ai, ua uhi ʻia mai i ka hulu melemele o nā manu ʻōʻō, no laila, manaʻo nō au ʻaʻole e loaʻa, hoʻi ʻokoʻa mai nei me ka nele. | I did not see Laieikawai, but my eyes beheld her house thatched with the yellow feathers of the oo bird, so I thought I could not win her and came back here unsuccessful. |
| Ch.8 p.43 para.2 sent.6 | A no ia manaʻo oʻu ʻaʻole e loaʻa iaʻu, manaʻo aʻe au iā ʻoukou, e nā kaikuahine, ka poʻe nō e loaʻa ai koʻu makemake i nā lā i hala, no laila, kiʻi mai nei au iā ʻoukou e holo i Hawaiʻi. | And as I thought of my failure, then I thought of you sisters, "who have won
my wishes for me in the days gone by; therefore I came for you to go to Hawaii, |
| Ch.8 p.45 para.1 sent.4 | Akā, ʻaʻole naʻe e hiki ke hiamoe i kēlā manawa, no ka mea, ua hoʻāla ʻia e ke ʻala o Mailehaʻiwale. | but they could no longer sleep, because they were wakened by the scent of Mailehaiwale. |
| Ch.8 p.45 para.5 sent.1 | WAKA: “ʻAʻole kēnā he ʻala ʻē, ʻo Mailehaʻiwale akula kēnā o nā kaikuahine ʻaʻala o ʻAiwohikupua i kiʻi maila iā ʻoe i wahine ʻoe, a i kāne ia. | WAKA: "That is no strange fragrance; it is certainly Mailehaiwale, the sweet-smelling sister of Aiwohikupua, who has come to get you for his wife, you for the wife and he for the husband; |
| Ch.8 p.45 para.6 sent.1 | LĀʻIEIKAWAI: “Kā! ʻAʻole au e moe iā ia.” | LAIEIKAWAI: "Bah! I will not marry him." |
| Ch.9 p.47 para.1 sent.1 | Ma hope iho o ka manawa i hōʻole ʻia ai ko ke aliʻi kāne makemake, a laila ʻōlelo akula ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kona kuhina, “E hoʻi kāua a e noho nā kaikuahine oʻu i uka nei, a na lākou nō e ʻimi aʻe i ko lākou wahi e noho ai, no ka mea ʻaʻole a lākou waiwai. | After this refusal, then Aiwohikupua said to his counsellor, "You and I will go home and let my sisters stay up here; as for them, let them live as they can, for they are worthless; |
| Ch.9 p.47 para.2 sent.4 | ʻAʻole paha no ko kaikuahine ia hewa e hiki ai iā kāua ke haʻalele iā lākou? | Is this your sisters' fault, |
| Ch.9 p.48 para.1 sent.5 | ʻAʻole hoʻi e like me ke ʻala mua iho nei. | not like the first, |
| Ch.9 p.48 para.6 sent.1 | WAKA: “ʻAʻole kēnā he ʻala ʻē, ʻo Mailekaluhea akula kēnā, ʻo kekahi kaikuahine ʻaʻala o ʻAiwohikupua i kiʻi maila iā ʻoe i wahine ʻoe, i kāne ia. | WAKA. "That is no strange fragrance. it is Mailekaluhea, the sweet-smelling sister of Aiwohikupua. who has come to make you his wife |
| Ch.9 p.48 para.7 sent.1 | LĀʻIEIKAWAI: “Kā! ʻAʻole au e moe iā ia.” | LAIEIKAWAI: "Bah! I will not marry him!" |
| Ch.9 p.48 para.11 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole kā hoʻi i pau nā kaikuahine o kāua. | "We have not tried all the sisters: |
| Ch.9 p.48 para.12 sent.1 | “ʻAuhea ʻoe, e kuʻu Kuhina,” wahi a ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole ʻo ʻoe ke hilahila ana, ʻo wau nō. | "Where are you, my counsellor!" said Aiwohikupua. "It is not
you who bears the shame; I am the one. |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole hoʻi e like me kēlā mau mea mua.” | not like those before." |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.6 sent.1 | WAKA: “ʻAʻole kēnā he ʻala ʻē, ʻo Mailelauliʻi akula kēnā, ʻo kekahi kaikuahine ʻaʻala o ʻAiwohikupua i kiʻi maila iā ʻoe i wahine ʻoe, i kāne ia. | WAKA: "That is no strange fragrance: it is Mailelaulii, one of the sweet-smelling sisters of Aiwohikupua. who has come to get you for his wife; |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.7 sent.1 | LĀʻIEIKAWAI: “Kā! ʻAʻole au e moe iā ia.” | LAIEIKAWAI: "Bah! I will not marry him!" |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.15 sent.2 | He ʻala ʻokoʻa hoʻi kēia, ʻaʻole hoʻi i like me nā ʻala mua iho nei. | a strange fragrance, not like the others, |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.16 sent.1 | WAKA: “ʻAʻole kēnā he ʻala ʻē, ʻo Mailepākaha akula kēnā, ʻo kekahi kaikuahine ʻaʻala o ʻAiwohikupua i kiʻi maila iā ʻoe i wahine ʻoe, i kāne ia. | WAKA: "'That is no strange fragrance; it is Mailepakaha, the sweet-smelling sister of Aiwohikupua, who has come to get you for a wife |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.17 sent.1 | LĀʻIEIKAWAI: “Kā! ʻAʻole au e moe iā ia. | Laieikawai: "Bah! I will not marry him! |
| Ch.9 p.49 para.17 sent.2 | Inā i kiʻi mai kekahi mea ʻē iaʻu, ʻaʻole nō wau e ʻae ana! | No matter who comes I will not sleep with him. |
| Ch.9 p.50 para.2 sent.2 | Inā he kūpono ʻole, ʻaʻole nō au e ʻae aku.” | but if not, I will refuse." |
| Ch.9 p.50 para.4 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo aku ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole a kākou hana i koe; ua pau. | Said Aiwohikupua, "There is nothing left to be done; it is over; |
| Ch.9 p.50 para.7 sent.2 | E lohe mua mākou i Kauaʻi, e lawe ana ʻoe a haʻalele iā mākou i kēia wahi inā ʻaʻole mākou e hiki mai. | Had we known in Kauai that you were bringing us to leave us in this place, we would never have come. |
| Ch.9 p.50 para.7 sent.5 | ʻAʻole ʻoe he malihini iaʻu. | you know me well, |
| Ch.9 p.50 para.9 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole wau e hiki aku,” wahi a kona kaikuahine ʻōpiopio, “aia a pau loa mākou i ka hoʻi pū me ʻoe, a laila, hoʻi aku au.” | "I will not go," answered the youngest sister, "unless we all go together, only then will I go home." |
| Ch.10 p.51 para.3 sent.1 | Huli maila ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, nānā hope akula i nā kaikuahine me ka ʻī aku, “ʻAʻole he hala hoʻomau. | Aiwohikupua turned and looked back at his younger sisters and said, "Constancy is not a sin; |
| Ch.10 p.51 para.3 sent.3 | Inā i loaʻa iho nei kuʻu makemake iā ʻoukou, a laila, ʻaʻole ʻoukou e noho. | If you had gained for me my desire you would not have to stay here; |
| Ch.10 p.52 para.1 sent.4 | A pau lākou i ke kau ma luna o nā waʻa, ʻaʻole naʻe kāhea ʻia mai. | all had gone aboard the canoe, there was no summons at all, |
| Ch.10 p.52 para.5 sent.1 | I loko o kēia oli ʻana a Mailekaluhea, ʻaʻole naʻe i maliu iki mai ko lākou kaikunāne. | While Mailekaluhea was singing not once did their brother compassionately look toward them, |
| Ch.10 p.53 para.7 sent.4 | A liʻuliʻu kā lākou lā hoʻolana ʻana i nā waʻa, ʻo ka huli akula nō ia o ʻAiwohikupua mā e holo; ʻaʻole wahi mea a maliu iki mai. | After letting the canoe float a little while, the whole party turned and made off, and had not the least compassion. |
| Ch.10 p.54 para.2 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo mai hoʻi ʻo Mailepākaha, “ʻAʻole nō e maliu mai iaʻu, no ka mea, he maliu ʻole aʻela kā hoʻi i ko kāua mau kaikuaʻana, oki loa aku paha wau. | Answered Mailepakaha, "He will have no compassion for me, for he had none on any of our sisters; it may be worse with me. |
| Ch.10 p.54 para.3 sent.1 | ʻAʻole naʻe he ʻae o kahi muli loa, a laila, hōʻailona ihola lākou ma ka huhuki ʻana i nā pua mauʻu. | But the youngest would not consent; then they drew lots by pulling the flower stems of grass; |
| Ch.10 p.56 para.1 sent.1 | Iā Kahalaomāpuana e uē ana no kona mau kaikuaʻana, i ia manawa kona noi ʻana aku iā ʻAiwohikupua e hoʻihoʻi iā ia me kona mau kaikuaʻana, akā, ʻaʻole nō he maliu mai ʻo ʻAiwohikupua. | Then Kahalaomapuana wept for her sisters and besought Aiwohikupua to restore her to her sisters; but Aiwohikupua would not take pity on her. |
| Ch.10 p.56 para.1 sent.2 | “E ʻAiwohikupua,” wahi a kona kaikuahine, “ʻaʻole wau e ʻae e lawe ʻoe iaʻu ʻo wau wale ke ʻole ʻoe e lawe pū me koʻu mau kaikuaʻana, no ka mea, ua kāhea mua aʻe nō ʻoe iaʻu i ko kākou wā i Paliuli, akā, ʻaʻole wau i ʻae mai no kou lawe iaʻu ʻo wau wale.” | "O Aiwohikupua," said his sister, "I will not let you take me by myself without taking my sisters with me, for you called me to you before when we were at Paliuli, but I would not consent to your taking me alone." |
| Ch.10 p.56 para.2 sent.1 | A nō ka paʻakikī loa o ʻAiwohikupua ʻaʻole e hoʻokuʻu i kona kaikuahine, i ia manawa, lele akula ʻo Kahalaomāpuana mai luna aku o ka waʻa a hāʻule i loko o ke kai. | And because of Aiwohikupua's stubbornness in refusing to let his sister go, then Kahalaomapuana jumped from the canoe into the sea. |
| Ch.11 p.57 para.1 sent.2 | A i ka wā i huli hope ai nā waʻa e kiʻi hou i kona kaikuahine, ʻaʻole naʻe i loaʻa. | and by the time the canoe had turned about to pick her up she was not to be found. |
| Ch.11 p.58 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole lākou i ʻike iki no kā lākou mea e hoʻohālua nei, no ka mea, ua paʻa mau ka puka o ka hale i nā lā a pau. | they had not had the least sight of her, for every day the door was fast closed. |
| Ch.11 p.58 para.1 sent.4 | A no ia mea, kūkākūkā aʻela lākou i mea e ʻike aku ai lākou iā Lāʻieikawai, a nui nā lā o ko lākou ʻimi ʻana i mea e ʻike aku ai no ke aliʻi wahine o Paliuli; ʻaʻole loaʻa. | So they consulted how to get sight of Laieikawai, and after seeking many days after some way to see the princess of Paliuli they found none. |
| Ch.11 p.58 para.2 sent.1 | I loko o kēlā mau lā kūkā o lākou, ʻaʻole i pane iki ko lākou kaikaina, a no ia mea, ʻōlelo aku kekahi o kona mau kaikuaʻana, “E Kahalaomāpuana, ʻo mākou wale nō ia e noʻonoʻo nei i mea no kākou e ʻike aku ai iā Lāʻieikawai, ʻaʻole naʻe he loaʻa. | During this debate their younger sister did not speak, so one of her older sisters said, "Kahalaomapuana, all of us have tried to devise a way to see Laieikawai, but we have not found one; |
| Ch.11 p.58 para.4 sent.3 | Pēlā mau lākou i hana ai a hala nā pō ʻehā, ʻaʻole naʻe i loaʻa iā Lāʻieikawai ka hoʻouluhua ʻia. | so they did every night, and the fourth night passed; but Laieikawai
gave them no concern. |
| Ch.11 p.58 para.5 sent.2 | I loko o ia manawa, ʻakahi nō a komo i loko o Lāʻieikawai ka leʻaleʻa no kēlā leo e kani nei; ʻaʻole naʻe i hoʻouluhua ʻia ke aliʻi wahine. | Then for the first time Laieikawai felt pleasure in the music, but the princess paid no attention to it. |
| Ch.11 p.58 para.6 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i uluhua ke aliʻi. | but the princess took no notice. |
| Ch.12 p.63 para.1 sent.1 | A no ka lilo loa o ko Lāʻieikawai manawa i ka ʻoliʻoli no ka mea kani leʻaleʻa a ke kaikamahine, a laila, kēnā aʻela ʻo Lāʻieikawai i ke kaikamahine e hoʻokani hou, ʻī akula ke kaikamahine, “ʻAʻole e kani ke hoʻokani hou, no ka mea, ua mālamalama loa. | Now, Laieikawai became fascinated with the merry instrument upon which the girl played, so she bade her sound it again. Said the girl, '' I can not sound it again, for it is now daylight, |
| Ch.12 p.63 para.1 sent.2 | He mea mau ia, ma ka pō wale nō e kani ai nei mea kani, ʻaʻole e pono ma ke ao,” a no kēia ʻōlelo a ke kaikamahine, kāhāhā loa ihola ʻo Lāʻieikawai me ka manaʻo he wahaheʻe na ke kaikamahine. | and this instrument is a kind that sounds only by night; it will never sound by day." |
| Ch.12 p.65 para.2 sent.6 | ʻAʻole e ʻae ʻia kekahi e lawe i kāne nāna me ka ʻae like ʻole o kākou. | no one taking a husband without the others' consent. |
| Ch.12 p.65 para.3 sent.4 | ʻAʻole he ʻoluʻolu e lawe mākou i kāne male, a ʻo ka makemake o ko mākou mau mākua, e noho puʻupaʻa mākou a hiki i ko mākou mau lā hope. | to take no delight in men; and it is their wish that we remain virgin until the end of our days; |
| Ch.12 p.66 para.2 sent.4 | Inā i hele mai kekahi mea makemake e ʻike iā ʻoe, inā he kāne a he wahine paha, a inā he aliʻi, ʻaʻole lākou e ʻike iā ʻoe ke ʻole mākou e ʻae aku. | If anyone wishes to see you, be he a man, or maybe a woman, or even a chief, he shall not see you without our approval. |
| Ch.12 p.66 para.5 sent.2 | I loko naʻe o ko lākou noho ʻana, ʻaʻole lākou i ʻike i ko lākou luhi ma ia noho ʻana. | and while they dwelt there never did they weary of life. |
| Ch.12 p.66 para.5 sent.3 | ʻAʻole hoʻi lākou i ʻike iki i ka mea nāna e hana mai kā lākou ʻai. | Never did they even see the person who prepared them food, |
| Ch.13 p.67 para.1 sent.2 | Hoʻohuli hou nā waʻa i hope e ʻimi iā Kahalaomāpuana, ʻaʻole naʻe i loaʻa, no laila, haʻalele loa ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kona kaikuahine ʻōpiopio a hoʻi loa aku i Kauaʻi. | The canoe turned back to recover Kahalaomapuana, but the party did not find her; then Aiwohikupua abandoned his young sister and sailed straight for Kauai. |
| Ch.13 p.68 para.1 sent.3 | I loko o ko lākou manawa ʻai, ʻaʻole i loaʻa iā lākou ka ʻona ʻana o ka ʻawa, a no ka loaʻa ʻole o ka ʻona o ka ʻawa, hoʻolale koke aʻela ke aliʻi i kona mau mama ʻawa e mama hou ka ʻawa. | During the feasting, the awa had not the least effect upon them. And because the awa had no effect, the chief hastily urged his awa chewers to chew the awa a second time. |
| Ch.13 p.68 para.2 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i lohe ʻia ma o kāna poʻe i pāpā ai, akā, ma ka waha ponoʻī nō o ʻAiwohikupua i lohe ʻia ai ka ʻōlelo huna a ke aliʻi. | not from one of his own men was the forbidden story told, but from the mouth of Aiwohikupua himself was the prince's secret heard. |
| Ch.13 p.68 para.3 sent.3 | I nānā akula ka hana i ka hale o ke aliʻi, ʻaʻole i kana mai o koʻu hilahila. | when I went to see the chief's house, it was very beautiful,
I was ashamed; |
| Ch.13 p.68 para.3 sent.8 | He ʻoi nō hoʻi kēlā o ka wahine kūpaʻa nui wale, ʻaʻole i ka lua.” | Surely that woman is the most stubborn of all, she has no equal." |
| Ch.13 p.68 para.4 sent.4 | ʻAʻole wau i manaʻo he wahine paʻakikī ia. | I do not believe her to be a stubborn woman; |
| Ch.13 p.68 para.4 sent.5 | Inā e kū au i mua o kona mau maka, ʻaʻole au e ʻōlelo aku. | give me a chance to stand before her eyes; I should not have to speak, |
| Ch.13 p.69 para.7 sent.1 | ʻEhā nā lā o Lāʻieikawai o ka hiki ʻana ma Keaʻau ma hope iho o ko Hauaʻiliki puka ʻana aku, a ʻehā nō hoʻi lā o ko Hauaʻiliki hōʻike ʻana iā ia i mua o Lāʻieikawai, a ʻaʻole naʻe he maliu iki ʻia mai. | Four days Laieikawai came to Keaau after Hauailiki's entering the harbor: and four days Hauailiki showed himself off before Laieikawai, and she took no notice at all of him. |
| Ch.13 p.69 para.9 sent.2 | ʻĪ akula ʻo Mailehaʻiwale iā Lāʻieikawai, “Inā paha ʻaʻole mākou i hoʻolaʻa ʻia e ko kākou mau mākua, inā ua lawe wau iā Hauaʻiliki i kāne naʻu.” | Said Mailehaiwale to Laieikawai, "If we had not been set apart by our parents, I would take Hauailiki for my husband." |
| Ch.13 p.70 para.1 sent.1 | ʻĪ aku ʻo Lāʻieikawai, “Ua makemake nō hoʻi wau inā hoʻi ʻaʻole wau i hoʻolaʻa ʻia e koʻu kupuna wahine, no laila, he mea ʻole koʻu makemake.” | Said Laieikawai, "I like him. too; but I, too, have been set apart by my grandmother, so that my liking is useless." |
| Ch.13 p.70 para.4 sent.1 | “Heʻe aku paha!” wahi a Hauaʻiliki, no ka mea, ʻaʻole ona makemake e heʻe pū ʻo ia me ka lehulehu ma ka nalu hoʻokahi. | "Land away!" answered Hauailiki, for he did not wish to ride in on the same breaker with the crowd. |
| Ch.13 p.70 para.4 sent.3 | ʻAʻole kā! | Not so! |
| Ch.13 p.70 para.6 sent.2 | ʻAʻole kā! Hoʻomau akula ʻo ia i ka heʻe nalu a hala ʻelima nalu, ʻo ia mau nō. | Not so! He kept on surfing until the fifth wave had passed, it was the same; |
| Ch.13 p.70 para.6 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe i loaʻa ka heahea ʻia mai, no laila, hoʻomaka maila iā Hauaʻiliki ke kaumaha me ka hōʻoiaʻiʻo iki i kēlā ʻōlelo a ʻAiwohikupua no ka “paʻakikī o Lāʻieikawai.” | he got no call whatever; then Hauailiki first felt discouragement, with the proof of Aiwohikupua's saying about the "stubbornness of Laieikawai." |
| Ch.14 p.71 para.1 sent.1 | A ʻike maopopo aʻela ʻo Hauaʻiliki ʻaʻole i komo i loko o Lāʻieikawai ka makemake iā Hauaʻiliki ma ia mea, hoʻopau aʻela ʻo ia i ka heʻe nalu ma ka papa; manaʻo aʻela ʻo ia e kaha. Haʻalele ihola ʻo ia i kona papa a ʻau akula i kūlana heʻe nalu. | When Hauailiki saw that Laieikawai still paid no attention to him he made up his mind to come in on the surf without the board. |
| Ch.14 p.71 para.4 sent.2 | A hala ʻelima nalu, ʻaʻole i loaʻa ka hea mai a Lāʻieikawai iā ia nei, no laila, he mea kaumaha loa ia iā Hauaʻiliki ka maliu ʻole mai o Lāʻieikawai iā ia nei, a he mea hilahila nui loa hoʻi nona, no ka mea, ua ʻōlelo kaena mua kēlā iā ʻAiwohikupua e like me kā kākou ʻike ʻana ma nā mokuna ma mua aʻe, a no kēia mea, lana mālie ihola ʻo ia ma kūlana nalu. | until five breakers had come in; no summons came to him from Laieikawai. Then Hauailiki was heavy-hearted because Laieikawai took no notice of him, and he felt ashamed because of his boast to Aiwohikupua, as we have seen in the last chapter. So he floated gently on the waves, |
| Ch.14 p.72 para.1 sent.2 | ʻĪ ihola ʻo Hauaʻiliki, ʻo ia wale nō, “ʻAʻole nō kā hoʻi ʻoe e kala i makemake ai, hoʻolohi wale iho nō,” a no ka peʻahi a ke aliʻi wahine o Paliuli, hoʻomoe ihola kēia i ka nalu a pae pono akula ma kahi a Lāʻieikawai mā e noho mai ana. | Hauailiki boasted to himself, "You wanted me all the time; you just delayed." And at the signal of the princess of Paliuli he lay upon the breaker and landed right where Laieikawai and her companions were sitting; |
| Ch.14 p.72 para.1 sent.4 | A ma hope iho o ia manawa, e uhi ana ka noe a me ka ʻohu, a i ka mao ʻana aʻe, ʻaʻole ʻo Lāʻieikawai mā. | And soon after the mist and fog covered the land, and when it passed away nothing was to be seen of Laieikawai and her party; |
| Ch.14 p.72 para.4 sent.4 | ʻAʻole o ʻolua kuleana e piʻi mai ai i ʻaneʻi, no ka mea, ua hoʻonoho ʻia mai wau ma ʻaneʻi he kiaʻi maka mua no ke aliʻi, a naʻu nō e hoʻokuke aku i nā mea a pau i hiki mai ma ʻaneʻi me ke kuleana ʻole. | you two have no business to come up here, for I am the outpost of the princess's guards and it is my business to drive back all who come here; |
| Ch.14 p.72 para.6 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ʻo Mailehaʻiwale, “ʻAʻole wau e ʻae aku i ko ʻolua manaʻo, no ka mea, ʻo koʻu kuleana nō ia i hoʻonoho ʻia ai ma kēia wahi e kipaku aku i ka poʻe hele mai i uka nei e like me ʻolua.” | Said Mailehaiwale, "I will not let you; for I am put here to drive off everybody who comes up here like you two." |
| Ch.14 p.72 para.7 sent.3 | ʻAʻole he pono no ʻolua e piʻi mai i ʻaneʻi. | you two have no right to come up here. |
| Ch.14 p.73 para.2 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole ʻolua e pono pēlā,” wahi a Mailekaluhea, “no ka mea, ua hoʻonoho ʻia mai mākou he mau kiaʻi e kipaku aku i nā mea a pau i hele mai i kēia wahi, no laila, e hoʻi ʻolua!” | "You two have no such right," said Mailekaluhea, "for we guards are stationed here to drive off everybody who comes to this place: so, you two go back." |
| Ch.14 p.73 para.3 sent.3 | Iā lāua i hiki aku ai i mua o Mailepākaha, ʻaʻole he ʻoluʻolu iki o kēia kiaʻi i ko lāua hoʻokuʻu ʻia ʻana mai e nā kiaʻi mua, akā, no ka pākela o ka maʻalea ma ke kamaʻilio ʻana, ua hoʻokuʻu ʻia akula lāua. | When they came before Mailepakaha this guardian was not at all pleased at their having been let slip by the first guards, but so crafty was their speech that they were allowed to pass. |
| Ch.14 p.73 para.5 sent.2 | E kū ʻoe a hele aku, no ka mea, ʻaʻole o ʻolua kuleana o kēia wahi. | haste and go back, for you two have no business here; |
| Ch.14 p.74 para.1 sent.1 | Iā ia i piʻi aku ai, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i hele aku ma ke alanui mua a lāua i piʻi mua ai a ma kahi e kokoke aku ana iā Mailehaʻiwale. | In going up, he did not follow the road the two had taken before, but close to Mailehaiwale |
| Ch.14 p.74 para.5 sent.2 | ʻAʻole oʻu manaʻo i kāu mea e ʻōlelo mai nei, no ka mea, ua loaʻa nō ia mea iaʻu ma ka moeʻuhane, ua hana nō e like me ka hana iā ʻoe, a he aha lā ia mea iaʻu? | what you say is no concern of mine; for the same thing has come to me in a dream and it happened to me as it happened to you, and what is that to me? |
| Ch.14 p.74 para.7 sent.3 | A lohe lāua i kēia leo nīnau, hoʻomaha ihola ke aliʻi, ʻaʻole i pane aku. | When she heard the questioner, Laieikawai ceased speaking. |
| Ch.14 p.74 para.8 sent.4 | ʻAʻole i kūpono kou komo ʻana mai nei! | you have no right to enter here; |
| Ch.14 p.74 para.8 sent.5 | Ua ʻōlelo aku wau iā ʻoe i kēlā pō ma mua ʻaʻole ou kuleana ma kēia wahi! | I told you before that you had no business in this place, |
| Ch.14 p.75 para.1 sent.1 | A ʻike ihola ʻo Hauaʻiliki ʻaʻole he kuleana hou e loaʻa ai ʻo Lāʻieikawai, a laila, hoʻomākaukau aʻela nā wāʻa no ka hoʻi i Kauaʻi. | When Hauailiki saw that he had no further chance to win Laieikawai, then he made the canoe ready to go back to Kauai, |
| Ch.15 p.77 para.2 sent.3 | ʻAʻole au e nele ana i koʻu makemake, no ka mea, aia aku lā i oʻu mau kaikuahine ke kiaʻi o kaʻu mea e manaʻo nei.” | I shall not fail of my desire; for my sisters are now guardians of her on whom I have set my heart.'' |
| Ch.15 p.77 para.3 sent.1 | A no kēlā ʻōlelo a ʻAiwohikupua, pane maila ʻo Hauaʻiliki, “ʻAʻole e loaʻa iā ʻoe, no ka mea, ua ʻike akula wau i ke kapu o ke aliʻi wahine, a kapukapu nō hoʻi me ou mau kaikuahine. | At these words of Aiwohikupua, Hauailiki said, "You will not succeed, for I saw that the princess was taboo, and your sisters also put on reserved airs; |
| Ch.15 p.77 para.3 sent.2 | Hoʻokahi naʻe kaikuahine huhū loa, ʻo kahi mea ʻuʻuku, no laila koʻu manaʻo paʻa ʻaʻole e loaʻa iā ʻoe, a he uku nō kou kokoke aku.” | one of them, indeed, was furious, the smallest of them; so my belief is you will not succeed, and if you go near you will get paid for it." |
| Ch.15 p.77 para.3 sent.3 | A no kēia ʻōlelo a Hauaʻiliki, ʻaʻole he manaʻoʻiʻo ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, no ka mea, ua manaʻolana loa kēlā no ka lohe ʻana ʻo kona mau kaikuahine nā kiaʻi o ke aliʻi. | To Hauailiki's words Aiwohikupua paid no attention, for he was hopeful because of what he had heard of his sisters guarding the princess. |
| Ch.15 p.78 para.6 sent.3 | Akā, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ʻAiwohikupua manaʻo i ia kapu, no ka mea, ua lohe mua nō ia ʻo kona mau kaikuahine ka mana kiaʻi. | But Aiwohikupua would not believe it taboo because of having heard that his sisters had the guardian power. |
| Ch.15 p.79 para.1 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole naʻe lāua i ʻike i ka weliweli o ia pahu kapu, no ka mea, e mōlehulehu ana nō. | but they could not see in the dark how terrible it was. |
| Ch.15 p.79 para.2 sent.1 | Haʻalele lāua i kēlā pahu, ʻaʻole i liʻuliʻu ko lāua hele ʻana aku, hālāwai mua nō lāua me ke kiaʻi mua me Mailehaʻiwale. | They left the sign, went a little way and met Mailehaiwale; |
| Ch.16 p.81 para.1 sent.3 | Pane maila ke kiaʻi nui, “E hoʻi ʻolua ʻānō! Mai lohi, a ʻaʻole hoʻi e kali, no ka mea, ua kapu ke aliʻi! ʻAʻole nō ou kuleana ma kēia wahi, a ʻaʻole nō hoʻi e hiki iā ʻoe ke manaʻo mai he mau kaikuahine mākou nou; ua hala i ia manawa!” | Said the head guard, "Return at once, linger not, delay not your going, for the princess is taboo, you have not the least business in this place; and never let the idea come to you that we are your sisters; that time has passed." |
| Ch.16 p.83 para.1 sent.6 | Hemahema nō ʻoe, pau loa kākou, ʻaʻole e pakele. | if you blunder, there is an end of us, we shall not escape; |
| Ch.16 p.83 para.3 sent.4 | ʻAʻole naʻe lākou i ʻike i kēia mea, no laila, hoʻomau akula lākou i ka hele ʻana. | but they did not see the creature, so they went on; |
| Ch.16 p.83 para.3 sent.5 | ʻAʻole naʻe lākou i liʻuliʻu aku, he ʻike ʻana kā lākou i ka ʻūpoʻi ʻana iho a ke a luna o ua moʻo nei ma luna pono iho o lākou nei; aia naʻe lākou nei | soon they saw the upper jaw of the lizard hanging right over them; they were just between the lizard's jaws; |
| Ch.16 p.83 para.3 sent.7 | I ia manawa, e lele koke aku ana ka hope kuhina, ʻaʻole i kaʻawale aku, ʻo ka mūkā koke ʻia akula nō ia, pau loa, ʻaʻohe ʻāhaʻilono. | then the assistant counsellor leaped quickly back, could not make the distance; it snapped them up; not a messenger was left. |
| Ch.16 p.83 para.5 sent.1 | Kali hou nō ke aliʻi, ʻaʻole i hoʻi aku. | Again the chief waited; they came not back. |
| Ch.16 p.84 para.3 sent.1 | I ua mau ʻelele lā i hala aku ai, ʻaʻole i liʻuliʻu, hālāwai maila me lāua kekahi kanaka kia manu mai uka mai o ʻOlaʻa, nīnau maila, “Ma hea kā ʻolua hele?” | Not long after they had left they met another man, a bird catcher from the uplands of Olaa; he asked. "Where are you two going?" |
| Ch.16 p.84 para.4 sent.2 | ʻAwalu kanahā i hoʻouna ʻia, ʻaʻole hoʻokahi o lākou i hoʻi aʻe.” | eight times forty men have been sent — not one returned." |
| Ch.16 p.84 para.5 sent.1 | “Pau akula,” wahi a ke kia manu, “i ka moʻo nui iā Kihanuilūlūmoku, ʻaʻole e pakele mai.” | "They are done for," said the bird catcher, "in the great lizard, Kihanuilulumoku; they have not been spared." |
| Ch.16 p.84 para.5 sent.3 | ʻAʻole i ʻupuʻupu, lohe akula lāua i ka hū a ka makani a me ke kamumu o nā lāʻau e hina ana ma ʻō a ma ʻō, a laila, hoʻomanaʻo lāua i ka ʻōlelo a ke kia manu, “Inā e hū ana ka makani, ʻo ua moʻo lā ia.” | not long after they heard the sighing of the wind and the humming of the trees bending back and forth; then they remembered the bird catcher's words, "If the wind hums, that is from the lizard." |
| Ch.17 p.87 para.5 sent.4 | ʻAʻole i ʻupuʻupu, hina ana ka ʻohu i kai, a laila, manaʻo aʻela ʻo ʻAiwohikupua ua lanakila ka moʻo, a laila, he mea kaumaha iā ʻAiwohikupua no ka pio ʻana o kā lākou ʻaoʻao. | and no short time after turned seaward, then Aiwohikupua knew that the lizard had prevailed and Aiwohikupua regretted the defeat of their side. |
| Ch.17 p.87 para.6 sent.4 | (ʻO ke kolu kēia o ko ʻAiwohikupua hiki ʻana i Paliuli no Lāʻieikawai, ʻaʻole he kō iki o kona makemake.) | (This was the third time that Aiwohikupua had been to Paliuli after Laieikawai without fulfilling his mission.) |
| Ch.17 p.88 para.1 sent.1 | A loaʻa kona hoʻomaikaʻi ʻia i mua o kona akua me ke kala ʻia o kona hala hoʻohiki, “ʻAʻole e lawe i kekahi o nā wāhine o kēia mau mokupuni i wahine hoʻāo,” e like me nā mea i hōʻike | And he obtained favor in the presence of his god, and was released from his sinful vow "not to take any woman of these islands to wife," as has been shown in the former chapters of this story. After the ceremonies at Kauai, he sent his messengers, the Snipe
and the Turnstone, to go and announce before Poliahu the demands
of the chief. |
| Ch.17 p.88 para.8 sent.1 | A lohe ke aliʻi i kēia ʻōlelo hope a nā ʻelele, manaʻo aʻela ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kēia mau ʻōlelo, ʻaʻole ia i hiki i o Poliʻahu lā. | When Aiwohikupua heard the messengers' words he suspected that they had not gone to Poliahu: |
| Ch.17 p.88 para.10 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole i loaʻa iā ʻolua ʻo Poliʻahu, ʻo Hinaikamalama akula ia.” | Said Aiwohikupua, "You did not find Poliahu; this was Hinaikamalama." |
| Ch.18 p.90 para.6 sent.2 | A hiki lākou i Waiʻulaʻula, ua paʻuhia lākou e ke anu, a no laila, hoʻouna akula ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i kona ʻelele e haʻi aku iā Poliʻahu, “ʻAʻole e hiki aku lākou no ke anu.” | When they came to Waiulaula they were shivering with cold, so Aiwohikupua sent his messenger to tell Poliahu, "They can not come for the cold." |
| Ch.18 p.91 para.4 sent.3 | I ia manawa a ia nei i komo aku ai i loko o ka ʻaha leʻaleʻa, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ʻAiwohikupua i ʻike maopopo mai i ia manawa, no ka mea, ua lilo i ka hula kāʻeke. | When she came into their midst Aiwohikupua did not see her, for his attention was taken by the dance. |
| Ch.18 p.91 para.8 sent.9 | ʻŌlelo aku wau, ʻaʻole oʻu makemake i kona kumu pili, a laila, haʻi aku wau i kaʻu kumu pili makemake, ʻo nā kino nō o māua. | I said I did not like his bet; then I told the bet I liked, our persons; |
| Ch.18 p.91 para.8 sent.13 | I ke kōnane ʻana naʻe, ʻaʻole i liʻuliʻu, paʻa mua iaʻu ma luna o ka papa kōnane a māua, ʻo ko ia ala make ihola nō ia. | And in the game in a little while my piece blocked the game, and he was beaten. |
| Ch.19 p.95 para.4 sent.1 | I kēia manawa, ʻōlelo akula ʻo Hinaikamalama iā ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole anei ʻoe i ʻike i ke kumu o kēia anu o kāua? Inā ua ʻike ʻoe i ke kumu o kēia anu, a laila, e haʻi mai. | This time Hinaikamalama said to Aiwohikupua, "Do you not know any reason for our being cold? If you know the reason, then tell me. |
| Ch.19 p.96 para.7 sent.1 | ʻĪ aku ʻo ʻAiwohikupua, “ʻAʻole noʻu nā wela. | Said Aiwohikupua, "It is not my doing; |
| Ch.19 p.97 para.5 sent.1 | A no ka ʻike ʻole o ka mea ʻume iā Hinaikamalama i kēlā pō, no laila, ʻaʻole e hiki i ka mea ʻume ke hoʻomaka i kāna hana, no ka mea, ua ʻōlelo ʻia i ka pō mua, no Hauaʻiliki a me Hinaikamalama ka leʻaleʻa mua o ia pō, a no ka loaʻa ʻole i ka maka o ka mea ʻume, ua lilo ka leʻaleʻa i nā mea ʻē aʻe. | And as the master of ceremonies had not seen Hinaikamalama early that night, he had not done his duty. For on the former night the first game this night had been promised to Hauailiki and Hinaikamalama, but not seeing her he gave the first game to others. |
| Ch.19 p.97 para.9 sent.2 | “Inā he lawe kou iaʻu no ka manawa pokole a pau aʻe, a laila, ua pau kāua, no ka mea, ʻaʻole pēlā ka makemake o koʻu mau mākua, a laila, e waiho puʻupaʻa iaʻu pēlā. | "If you take me only for a little while, then there is an end of it, for my parents do not wish me to give up my virginity thus. |
| Ch.19 p.98 para.2 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole pēlā,” wahi a Hinaikamalama, “E waiho puʻupaʻa iaʻu pēlā a hiki i kou manawa e kiʻi aʻe ai iaʻu, a loaʻa wau i Hāna.” | "Not so," said Hinaikamalama,"let me be virgin until you are ready to come and get me at Hana." |
| Ch.19 p.99 para.1 sent.2 | ʻAʻole nō hoʻi e manaʻo ʻoe iā ia ʻo kāu wahine ia, no ka mea, ua lilo nō ia iā kāua. | by no means think of her as your wife, for she belongs to us two. |
| Ch.20 p.102 para.6 sent.1 | Iā Lāʻieikawai mā e noho ana ma kahi a lāua e hoʻohālua ana no Kekalukaluokēwā, ʻaʻole naʻe lāua i ʻike i ke kāne a ke kupuna wahine i makemake ai. | As Laieikawai and her companion spied out for Kekalukahiokewa, they did not know which man the grandmother wanted. |
| Ch.20 p.103 para.1 sent.1 | ʻŌlelo aku kona kahu, “Pono kāua ke kali a pau kā lākou heʻe nalu ʻana, a ʻo ka mea e hele wale mai ana, ʻaʻole he paʻa i ka papa heʻe nalu, a laila, ʻo ke aliʻi nō ia. | Her nurse said. "Better wait until they are through surfing, and the one who comes back without a board, he is the chief." |
| Ch.20 p.103 para.5 sent.4 | No laila, i kou puka ʻana mai loko aku nei o kou hale, ʻaʻole ʻoe e kamaʻilio iki aku i kekahi kāne, ʻaʻole hoʻi i kekahi wahine. | So when you go out of the house, speak no word to anyone, man or woman, |
| Ch.20 p.104 para.2 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole wau e haʻalele iā ʻoukou,” wahi a Lāʻieikawai. | ["I won't leave you," said Laieikawai. |
| Ch.20 p.104 para.3 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe e hiki, no ka mea, ua ālai ʻia mai e ka hilahila, a hiki ʻole ke pane aku. | but he was ashamed to approach her and never spoke to her. |
| Ch.20 p.104 para.4 sent.1 | I ka ʻehā o nā lā hoʻomalu o Lāʻieikawai, he mea hoʻohuoi iā Halaaniani ka nalo ʻana o Lāʻieikawai, ʻaʻole i hiki hou ma Keaʻau. | During the four days of Laieikawai's retirement Halaaniani brooded jealously over her absence. She came no more to Keaau. |
| Ch.20 p.104 para.6 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila kona kaikuahine, “ʻAʻole nā he wahine ʻē, ʻo ka moʻopuna nā a Waka, ʻo Lāʻieikawai. | Said his sister, "She is no other than Waka's grandchild, Laieikawai, |
| Ch.20 p.105 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole i loaʻa he moe iā ia, a ala maila nō hoʻi ʻo Maliʻo i ia manawa nō. | he could not sleep, and Malio awoke at the same time. |
| Ch.21 p.107 para.2 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ʻo Halaaniani, “ʻAʻole aʻu wahi moe. | Said Halaaniani. "I dreamed nothing, |
| Ch.21 p.107 para.2 sent.2 | I ka hiamoe ʻana nō, ʻo ke oki nō ia, ʻaʻole wau i loaʻa wahi moe iki, a puoho wale aʻela.” | as I slept I knew nothing, had not the least dream until I awoke just now." |
| Ch.21 p.107 para.4 sent.6 | ʻAʻole naʻe wau i ʻike i ka lele ʻana aku ʻo ka manu hope nana i hoʻomoe ua pūnana nei, a puoho wale aʻela wau. | [However I didn't see the last bird fly away who sat on the nest, and then I awoke.] |
| Ch.21 p.107 para.4 sent.7 | ʻAʻole nō hoʻi i ʻike ʻia ka hoʻi hou ʻana mai o ka manu nana ka pūnana.” | but I saw not that bird come again whose the nest was.'' |
| Ch.21 p.108 para.4 sent.1 | E like me ke kauoha a Waka i kāna moʻopuna, “ʻAʻole e ʻōlelo i nā mea ʻē aʻe a laʻa ka ihu iā Kekalukaluokēwā, a laila, ʻōlelo i nā mea ʻē aʻe.” | As Waka had commanded her grandchild, "speak to no one until you have kissed Kekalukaluokewa, then speak to others," |
| Ch.21 p.108 para.4 sent.3 | A iā lākou ʻekolu ma kūlana heʻe nalu, ʻaʻole kekahi leo i lohe ʻia i waena o lākou. | While they rode the surf not one word was heard between them. |
| Ch.21 p.109 para.1 sent.2 | ʻAhā nalu, ʻaʻole ou pae iki. | This is the fourth wave you have not ridden; |
| Ch.21 p.109 para.12 sent.1 | “ʻO kūlana nalu kēia,” wahi a Halaaniani, “Ke ʻōlelo aku nei au iā ʻoe, inā i haki ka nalu mua, ʻaʻole kāua e pae i ia nalu. | "This is our crest." said Halaaniani. "I warn you when the first wave breaks, do not ride that wave, |
| Ch.21 p.109 para.12 sent.2 | A i ka lua o ka nalu, ʻaʻole nō e pae. | or the second; |
| Ch.21 p.109 para.12 sent.5 | Inā e haʻalele ʻoe i ka papa, a laila, ʻaʻole ʻoe e ʻike iaʻu.” | if you leave the board, then you will not see me again." |
| Ch.21 p.111 para.1 sent.4 | ʻAʻole i ʻupuʻupu iho, ʻōpuʻu ana kahi nalu. | not long after another wave swelled. |
| Ch.21 p.111 para.2 sent.2 | I kēlā manawa, aia nō ʻo Lāʻieikawai i loko o ka halehale poʻipū o ka nalu, a i ka haki maikaʻi ʻana o ka nalu, i ʻalawa aʻe ka hana o Lāʻieikawai, ʻaʻole ʻo Halaaniani me ia. | Now, when Laieikawai was deep under the wave, the crest broke finely; Laieikawai glanced about to see how things were; Halaaniani was not with her. |
| Ch.22 p.115 para.2 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ke kupuna wahine me ka inaina, “ʻAʻole kēia ʻo Kekalukaluokēwā! | Said the grandmother in a rage, "This is no Kekalukahiokewa; |
| Ch.22 p.115 para.2 sent.3 | No laila, ke haʻi aku nei wau i kuʻu manaʻo paʻa iā ʻoe, ʻaʻole wau e ʻike hou i kou maka, e kuʻu moʻopuna, ma kēia hope aku a hiki i kuʻu lā make, no ka mea, ua pale ʻoe i kaʻu mau ʻōlelo. | Therefore, I give you my oath never to see your face again, my grandchild, from this time until I die, for you have disobeyed me. |
| Ch.22 p.115 para.2 sent.6 | ʻO ko mana, ʻaʻole ia me ʻoe. | your supernatural power is yours no longer; |
| Ch.22 p.115 para.4 sent.3 | Kainoa he pono kaʻu moʻopuna, ʻaʻole kā! | I thought my grandchild was a good girl, not so! |
| Ch.22 p.116 para.2 sent.2 | Ua ʻupu aku wau ʻo ke aliʻi o Kauaʻi ke kāne, akā, ʻaʻole naʻe i hoʻolohe i kaʻu ʻōlelo; ua lilo aku iā Halaaniani. | I wished to have the chief of Kauai for her husband, but she would not listen to me, she became Halaaniani's; |
| Ch.22 p.116 para.4 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole i kaumaha kona manaʻo no Lāʻielohelohe, no ka mea, ua manaʻo nō he pōmaikaʻi e ili mai ana ma luna ona. | But he did not sorrow for Laielohelohe, thinking how good fortune had come to her. |
| Ch.22 p.116 para.5 sent.1 | I ka manawa i lawe ʻia ai ʻo Lāʻielohelohe, ʻaʻole kekahi o nā kānaka hoe waʻa i ʻike aku iā ia a hiki wale i Hawaiʻi. | From the time Laielohelohe was taken on board, not one of the paddlers had the least glimpse of her until they came to Hawaii. |
| Ch.22 p.116 para.7 sent.3 | ʻAʻole kā! | Not so! |
| Ch.22 p.117 para.4 sent.4 | No laila, ʻaʻole mākou e haʻalele iā ʻoe, ʻaʻole hoʻi ʻoe e haʻalele iā mākou a hiki i ko kākou make ʻana. | As we will not forsake you, so do not you forsake us until our death; |
| Ch.22 p.117 para.5 sent.1 | A lohe ʻo Lāʻieikawai i kēia mau ʻōlelo, hāʻule ihola nā kulu waimaka no ke aloha i kona mau hoa kūkā, me ka ʻī aku, “Kuhi au e haʻalele ana ʻoukou iaʻu i ka lawe ʻia ʻana o ka pōmaikaʻi mai o kākou aku, ʻaʻole kā! | When Laieikawai heard these words her tears fell for love of her comrades, and she said, "I supposed you would forsake me when fortune was taken from me; not so! |
| Ch.22 p.118 para.1 sent.1 | I ka pō iho, ʻōlelo hoʻowalewale akula ʻo Halaaniani iā Lāʻieikawai, me ka ʻī aku, “Iā kāua e noho nei i uka nei, mai ko kāua noho ʻana i uka nei a hiki i kēia manawa, ʻaʻole he pau o koʻu leʻaleʻa i ka heʻe nalu. | That night Halaaniani deceived Laieikawai, saying, "Ever since we have lived up here, my delight in surf riding has never ceased; |
| Ch.22 p.118 para.3 sent.4 | ʻAʻole nō i pau ka leʻaleʻa heʻe nalu o kā kākou kāne. | and our husband has not had enough of the sport of surf riding; |
| Ch.22 p.118 para.5 sent.2 | Noho ihola ʻo ia ma laila a pō ia lā, ʻaʻole i hoʻi mai kāna kāne. | there she remained; and night fell, and the husband did not return; |
| Ch.22 p.118 para.5 sent.3 | Mai ia pō a ao, ʻaʻole i hoʻi mai. | day came, and he did not return. |
| Ch.23 p.120 para.3 sent.2 | A pau kā lākou pihe uē, ʻōlelo maila ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, “He mea kupanaha, iā kākou e uē nei, ʻo ka hāmama wale iho nō kā koʻu waha, ʻaʻole a kahe mai o ka waimaka, ʻo ke kaea pū wale aʻela nō ia, me he mea lā, i pania mai ka waimaka.” | After their lament, said Kahalaomapuana, "This is a strange way to cry; you open your mouth wide, but no tears run; you seem to be dried up, as if the tears were shut off." |
| Ch.23 p.120 para.4 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, “Me he mea lā, ʻaʻole i pōʻino kā kākou kāne.” | Kahalaomapuana replied, ''As if there were nothing the matter with our husband." |
| Ch.23 p.120 para.6 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, “ʻAʻole i make. | Said Kahalaomapuana, "He is not dead; |
| Ch.23 p.120 para.6 sent.4 | A no kēia ʻōlelo a Kahalaomāpuana, kakali akula lākou a hala nā lā ʻehā, ʻaʻole lākou i ʻike i ke kō o kā Kahalaomāpuana mea i ʻōlelo ai. | Because of Kahalaomapuana's words they waited four days, but nothing happened. |
| Ch.23 p.121 para.3 sent.1 | Haʻi aʻela nō hoʻi ʻo Lāʻieikawai i kāna moe, ʻī maila ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, “ʻAʻole i make ʻo Halaaniani. | Laieikawai also told her dream, and Kahalaomapuana said, "Halaaniani is not dead; |
| Ch.23 p.121 para.8 sent.5 | ʻAʻole e loaʻa iaʻu ma kuʻu mana, no ka mea, ʻelua lāua.” | I can not do it by my power, for they are two." |
| Ch.23 p.122 para.3 sent.4 | Akā hoʻi, i ʻāluli ʻole aʻe kona mau maka i kuʻu hoʻokani aku, a laila, ʻaʻole e loaʻa iā kāua i kēia lā.” | but if she does not look toward where I am playing, then we shall not win to-day." |
| Ch.23 p.122 para.5 sent.4 | Pēlā a hiki i ka lima o ke kani ʻana o ka pū lāʻī, ʻaʻole ʻo Halaaniani i ʻike iki ua huli aʻe ka maka a hoʻolohe i kēia mea kani. | so on until the fifth time, but Halaaniani did not see the girl turn her eyes or listen to the sound. |
| Ch.23 p.122 para.6 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i hoʻi aku, no laila, hoʻomau hou akula ʻo Maliʻo i ke puhi i ka pū lāʻī. | but as he did not return, Malio again blew on the trumpet |
| Ch.23 p.122 para.6 sent.3 | ʻElima hoʻokani ʻana, ʻaʻole nō i ʻike iki ʻo Halaaniani i ka nānā o Lāʻielohelohe i kēia mea, a hoʻi wale nō. | five times; still Halaaniani did not see Laielohelohe pay the least attention until she went away altogether. |
| Ch.23 p.123 para.3 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe e hiki, no ka mea, ua lilo loa ʻo Lāʻielohelohe i ka hoʻolohe i ka mea kani. | and she stopped, for her attention was attracted to the music. |
| Ch.23 p.123 para.5 sent.4 | ʻAʻole au i ʻae me kekahi mea ʻē aʻe. | no one else; |
| Ch.23 p.123 para.7 sent.2 | Iā Halaaniani i hiki ai ma Keaʻau, ma muli o ke kauoha a kona kaikuahine, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i ʻike, a i lohe hoʻi no Lāʻieikawai. | When Halaaniani came to Keaau as his sister directed, he neither saw nor heard of Laieikawai. |
| Ch.24 p.127 para.1 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole i wikiwiki ʻo Kihanuilūlūmoku i ka lawe i kona mau haku, no ka mea, ua maopopo nō iā Kihanuilūlūmoku ka manawa e hui ai nā aliʻi. | but Kihanuilulumoku did not hurry to his mistresses, for he knew when the chiefs' meeting was to take place. |
| Ch.24 p.127 para.5 sent.1 | Iā lākou i hiki ai i kēlā manawa hoʻokahi me nā mea nona ka lā hoʻokahakaha, aia hoʻi, ua ʻike akula ʻo Lāʻieikawai iā Halaaniani, ʻaʻole i make. | Now they arrived at the same instant as those for whom the day was celebrated; lo! Laieikawai saw that Halaaniani was not dead, |
| Ch.24 p.127 para.7 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ʻo Waka, “ʻAʻole e lilo iā ia, akā, e iho aku kāua a kokoke aku wau i ka ʻaha. | Said Waka, "He shall never get her; but let us go down and I will get close to the place of meeting; |
| Ch.24 p.127 para.7 sent.2 | Inā ua hāʻawi aku ʻo ia i kona ihu e honi aku iā Halaaniani, ka mea aʻu i kauoha aku ai ʻaʻole e lilo i ka mea ʻē aʻe, a iā ʻoe wale nō e laʻa ai ka ihu o kuʻu moʻopuna, a laʻa pū nō hoʻi me kona kino, a laila, ua nele kāua i ka wahine ʻole. | if she has given Halaaniani a kiss, the thing which I forbade her to grant, for to you alone is my grandchild's kiss devoted — if she has defiled herself with him, then we lose the wife, |
| Ch.24 p.127 para.7 sent.4 | Akā hoʻi, ua hoʻolohe akula ia i kaʻu kauoha, ʻaʻole e lilo i kekahi mea ʻē aʻe. | But if she has harkened to my command not to trust anyone else, |
| Ch.24 p.127 para.7 sent.5 | ʻAʻole nō hoʻi e lilo ka leo ma kona pane ʻole aku iā Halaaniani, a laila, ua wahine nō ʻoe. | not even to open her lips to Halaaniani, then she is your wife, |
| Ch.24 p.128 para.3 sent.2 | A lilo ihola ʻo Halaaniani i mea nele loa, ʻaʻole ona kamaʻilio i koe. | And Halaaniani became a vagabond; nothing more remains to be said about him. |
| Ch.25 p.129 para.1 sent.2 | Hele akula lākou a haʻi akula i kā lākou ʻōlelo hoʻoholo i kūkā ai i mua o Lāʻieikawai me ka ʻī aku, “E ke aliʻi wahine o ka laʻi, ua kūkākūkā aʻe nei mākou i mea e hoʻopau ai i kou naʻau kaumaha no kou hoʻohilahila ʻia, akā, ʻaʻole ʻo ʻoe wale kai kaumaha. | They went and told Laieikawai their decision, saying: ''O princess of peace, we have agreed upon something to relieve your burden of shame, for not you alone bear the burden; |
| Ch.25 p.131 para.8 sent.5 | I loko naʻe o ko ka makāula hoʻi ʻana, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i haʻalele i kāna mau mea i lawe mai ai mai Kauaʻi mai (ʻo ia ka puaʻa a me ka moa). | On his return, he did not leave the offerings which he had brought from Kauai thither, the pig and the cock. |
| Ch.25 p.131 para.8 sent.6 | Ma kēia hoʻi ʻana a hiki ma Waimea i ʻOuli, ʻo ia kā ka makāula ʻike ʻana aku i ka piʻo o ke ānuenue i kai o Kawaihae, a no ka māluhiluhi o ua makāula nei, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i wikiwiki mai e ʻike i ke ʻano o ke ānuenue, no laila, hoʻomaha ihola ʻo ia ma laila. | When he reached Waimea, at Ouli, there he saw the rainbow arching over the sea at Kawaihae.
And the seer was so weary he was not quick to recognize the rainbow, but he stayed there, |
| Ch.25 p.131 para.8 sent.7 | A ma kekahi lā aʻe, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i ʻike hou i kēlā hōʻailona. | and on the next day he did not see the sign again. |
| Ch.25 p.132 para.3 sent.1 | I ia manawa, pule akula ʻo ia i kona akua e haʻi mai i ke ʻano o kēlā ānuenue āna e ʻike nei, akā, ʻaʻole i loaʻa i kona akua ka hoʻokō ʻia o kāna pule. | Then he prayed to his god to interpret the rainbow to him, but his god did not answer his prayer. |
| Ch.25 p.132 para.5 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole i loaʻa ka hōʻike ʻana ma ona lā, no laila, ʻaʻole ka makāula i waiho i kāna mau mōhai i mua o Lāʻieikawai. | but he got no answer that day. Therefore, the seer did not lay down his offering before Laieikawai. |
| Ch.25 p.133 para.2 sent.1 | A no kēia mea, emi hope maila ʻo ia a ma ke kaʻawale, pule hou akula i kona akua e hōʻike mai i kāna mea e ʻimi nei, akā, ʻaʻole nō i loaʻa ka hōʻike ʻana ma ona lā. | So he fell back to a distance to pray again to his god to show him
if this was the one he was seeking, but he got no answer that day; |
| Ch.25 p.133 para.3 sent.2 | ʻAʻole he ʻau pū me nā kamaʻāina heʻe nalu mai?” | Why do you not go surfing with the natives of the place?" |
| Ch.25 p.133 para.8 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ʻo Lāʻieikawai, “A inā e kau mākou ma ko waʻa, ʻaʻole anei āu hana ʻē aʻe no mākou?” | Said Laieikawai, "If we go on board your canoe, do you require anything of us?"' |
| Ch.26 p.136 para.7 sent.2 | Akā, ʻaʻole e hiki i kekahi o kēia poʻe kaikamāhine puʻupaʻa ke pani ma ka hakahaka o Poliʻahu a me Hinaikamalama. | but not one of these can fill the loss of Poliahu and Hinaikamalama. |
| Ch.26 p.136 para.8 sent.2 | He nani nō kēia poʻe, ʻaʻole naʻe e like aku me kekahi o kaʻu poʻe kaikamāhine.” | These are pretty enough, but not like my daughters." |
| Ch.26 p.137 para.4 sent.2 | Akā hoʻi, ʻo ka poʻe nāna nā kaikamāhine puʻupaʻa, ʻaʻole o lākou ʻoluʻolu. | But those whose virgin daughters were present were not pleased. |
| Ch.26 p.137 para.6 sent.6 | ʻEkolu hea ʻana o ka ilāmuku i kēia ʻōlelo, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ia i lohe i kekahi leo no loko mai. | Three times the executioner called, but heard not a sound from within. |
| Ch.26 p.138 para.3 sent.1 | I ka wehe ʻana aʻe, aia he pū maiʻa ko loko, ʻaʻole ka makāula ka mea i manaʻo ʻia. | When it was unwrapped there was a banana plant inside, not the prophet, as was expected. |
| Ch.26 p.138 para.5 sent.1 | I ia wā lākou e kū ana me Lāʻieikawai, lulu ka makani, malu ka lā, kaikoʻo ke kai, pualena ka moana, hoʻi ka waikahe o nā kahawai a paʻa i nā kumu wai, ʻaʻole he puka wai i kai. | As they stood there with Laieikawai, the wind blew, the sun was darkened, the sea grew rough, the ocean was reddened, the streams went back and stopped at their sources, no water flowed into the sea. |
| Ch.26 p.138 para.7 sent.2 | ʻAʻole wau na lākou i hoʻokuʻu mai kahi paʻa mai. | not by their means was I freed from prison, |
| Ch.26 p.139 para.1 sent.1 | A lohe ka makāula i kēia mea, haʻi akula ʻo ia i kāna ʻōlelo i ka luna, “E hoʻi ʻoe a ke aliʻi, kuʻu haku hoʻi, e ʻōlelo aku ʻoe, ʻaʻole e lilo kuʻu kaikamahine haku i wahine nāna. | When the seer heard it he said to the head man, "Return and tell the chief, my lord indeed, that my lordly daughter shall never become his wife; |
| Ch.26 p.139 para.1 sent.4 | ʻAʻole naʻe i ʻike hou ʻia ma ia hope iho i Wailua, hoʻi akula lākou a noho i Honopūwaiakua. | nor was he seen again after that at Wailua; they returned and dwelt at Honopuwaiakua. |
| Ch.27 p.141 para.3 sent.1 | Iā lāua i hiki aku ai, ʻaʻole lāua i ʻike iā Mokukelekahiki, ke kiaʻi nāna e mālama ko Kaʻōnohiokalā waiwai, kona kuhina nui hoʻi i loko o Keʻalohilani. | When they arrived they did not see Mokukelekahiki, the guard who watches over Kaonohiokala's wealth, his chief counsellor in The Shining Heavens; |
| Ch.27 p.143 para.3 sent.1 | ʻAʻole i ʻupuʻupu iho ma hope iho o kā lāua kamaʻilio ʻana, halulu ana ʻo Mokukelekahiki lāua me Kāʻeloikamalama ma ka puka o ka hale. | Not long after, Mokukelekahiki and Kaeloikamalama thundered at the door of the house. |
| Ch.27 p.145 para.4 sent.2 | ʻAʻole i ʻupuʻupu iho, kuʻu mai ana ʻo Lanalananuiʻaimakua i ka pūnāwelewele, hihipeʻa ka lewa. | Not long after, Great ancestral spider let down a spider-web that made a network in the air. |
| Ch.27 p.145 para.6 sent.3 | ʻAʻole e lohe i kāu ʻōlelo, kuhi auaneʻi iā ʻoe he mea ʻē. | he will not listen to you, he will take you for another. |
| Ch.27 p.145 para.7 sent.1 | “Kali aku ʻoe a moe, e huli ana ke alo i lalo, ʻaʻole i moe, akā, i nānā aku ʻoe a i huli ke alo i luna, ua moe kā hoʻi, a laila, hele aku ʻoe. | "Wait until he is asleep; should be turn his face down he is not asleep, but when you see him with the face turned up, he is really asleep; |
| Ch.27 p.146 para.4 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe i loaʻa ka hiamoe iā Moanalihaikawaokele. | Still Moanalihaikawaokele did not sleep. |
| Ch.27 p.146 para.6 sent.2 | Kūpaka aʻela, ʻaʻole e hiki, ua paʻa loa ka ʻumiʻumi iā Kahalaomāpuana. | he struggled to free himself; Kahalaomapuana held the beard tight; |
| Ch.27 p.147 para.7 sent.1 | Haʻi akula ʻo ia i nā mea a pau i hana ʻia e ko lākou kaikunāne a me kā lākou aikāne, ʻī maila ʻo Moanalihaikawaokele, “ʻAʻole naʻu e ʻae aku. | She related all that her brother had done, and their friend. Said Moanalihaikawaokele, "The consent is not mine to give, |
| Ch.27 p.147 para.8 sent.3 | I hiki mai kēlā i kakahiaka, e moe aku ana ʻoe i ka hale, ʻaʻole ona wahi e hele ʻē aku ai, no ka mea, ua haumia. | in the early morning when she comes, you will be sleeping in the house; there is no place for her to go to get away from you, because she is unclean. |
| Ch.28 p.149 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe e hiki i ua ʻo Laukieleʻula ke hoʻokaʻawale iā ia, no ka mea, ua haumia. | she could not go away because she was unclean |
| Ch.28 p.149 para.3 sent.2 | ʻAʻole e hiki iaʻu ke ʻike iā ʻoe, no ka mea, ua hiki mai kuʻu mau lā haumia. | I can not see you, for my days of uncleanness have come; |
| Ch.28 p.149 para.6 sent.4 | I ʻauʻau kēlā a hoʻi mai ma kapa, ʻaʻole ke kapa, a laila, manaʻo mai ua kiʻi aku au i hoʻi mai ai kēlā i ka hale nei. | when she has bathed and returns for the clothes, they will be gone; then she will think that I have taken them; when she comes to the house, |
| Ch.28 p.151 para.1 sent.1 | “Inā i uē ʻolua, a i pau ka uē ʻana a i nīnau mai iā ʻoe i ke kapa ona aʻu i lawe mai ai, a laila, haʻi aku ʻoe, aia iā ʻoe, a e hilahila kēlā me ka menemene iā ʻoe i ko haumia ʻana, ʻo ia hoʻi, ʻaʻole āna mea nui ʻē aʻe e uku mai ai no kou haumia i kona kapa i hoʻohaumia ʻia i kona maʻi. | "If you two weep and cease weeping and she asks you if I have taken her clothes, then tell her you have them, and she will be ashamed and shrink from you because she has defiled you; then she will have nothing great enough to recompense you for your defilement, |
| Ch.28 p.151 para.2 sent.2 | Iā ia i hiki aku ai, peʻe ihola ma kahi kokoke i ke kiʻowai, ʻaʻole i ʻupuʻupu iho, hiki ana ka makuahine, a wehe i ke kapa i hoʻohaumia ʻia, a lele akula i loko o ka wai. | When she arrived, she hid close to the water hole; not long after, the mother came, took off her polluted clothes and sprang into the water. |
| Ch.28 p.151 para.3 sent.1 | ʻAʻole kēia i liʻuliʻu iho, halulu ana ka makuahine. | She had not been there long; the mother came in a rage; |
| Ch.28 p.151 para.4 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe he ʻekemu mai. | No answer; |
| Ch.28 p.151 para.4 sent.4 | ʻEkolu āna kāhea ʻana, ʻaʻole naʻe he ʻekemu ʻia mai. | three times she called, not once an answer; |
| Ch.28 p.152 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole a mākou uku e uku aku ai no ka mālama ʻana a ke aliʻi iā mākou, a no ia mea, e ʻae mai ʻoe e iho aʻe au me kuʻu kaikunāne lani i lalo, a lawe mai iā Lāʻieikawai i luna nei.” | we have no way to repay the princess for her protection; and for this reason permit me and my princely brother to go down below and bring Laieikawai up here." |
| Ch.28 p.152 para.2 sent.1 | ʻĪ maila ka makuahine, “Ke ʻae aku nei au, no ka mea, ʻaʻole oʻu uku no kou mālama ʻana i kuʻu kapa i haumia iaʻu. | The mother said, "I grant it in recompense for your guarding my polluted garment. |
| Ch.28 p.152 para.2 sent.2 | Inā nō lā hoʻi he mea ʻē ka mea nāna i kiʻi mai nei, inā nō lā hoʻi ʻaʻole wau e ʻae aku. | "If anyone else had come to get him, I would not have consented; |
| Ch.28 p.152 para.2 sent.3 | ʻO ko kiʻi paka ʻana mai nei, ʻaʻole au e ʻauʻa aku. | since you come in person, I will not keep him back. |
| Ch.28 p.153 para.10 sent.2 | Inā ʻo kekahi o lākou kai kiʻi mai nei, inā ʻaʻole e hiki mai i o kāua nei; i lalo akula nō hoʻi. | if anyone else had brought her to get you, if she had not come to us two, she might have stayed below; |
| Ch.28 p.154 para.1 sent.2 | A laila, haʻi akula ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, “ʻAʻole he pono o ko mākou kaikunāne; ua kūʻē ko mākou noho ʻana. | Then said Kahalaomapuana, "My brother has not done right; he has opposed our living |
| Ch.28 p.154 para.2 sent.1 | “Kiʻi ʻo Mailehaʻiwale, ʻaʻole i loaʻa. | "Mailehaiwale went to woo her, gained nothing, |
| Ch.28 p.154 para.2 sent.3 | Kiʻi aku ʻo Mailekaluhea, ʻaʻole nō i loaʻa. | Mailekaluhea went, gained nothing at all; |
| Ch.28 p.154 para.2 sent.4 | Kiʻi aku ʻo Mailelauliʻi, ʻaʻole nō i loaʻa. | Mailelaulii went, gained nothing at all; |
| Ch.28 p.154 para.2 sent.5 | Kiʻi aku ʻo Mailepākaha, ʻaʻole nō i loaʻa. | Mailepakaha went, gained nothing at all; |
| Ch.28 p.154 para.2 sent.6 | I ka hōʻole wale nō a pau lākou, koe ʻo wau, ʻaʻole hoʻi wau i kiʻi, ʻo ka huhū ihola nō ia iā mākou, haʻalele i ka nāhelehele. | she refused them all; I remained, I never went to woo her; he went away in a rage leaving us in the jungle. |
| Ch.28 p.155 para.1 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole naʻe kākou e hālāwai i ia manawa. | "Still we shall not yet meet; |
| Ch.28 p.155 para.3 sent.1 | Hiki lāua i ʻOlaʻa, ʻaʻole ʻo Lāʻieikawai mā. | They came to Olaa. |
| Ch.28 p.155 para.3 sent.2 | Hanu aʻela ua moʻo nei a puni ʻo Hawaiʻi, ʻaʻole. | Laieikawai and her companions were gone; the lizard smelled all about Hawaii; nothing. |
| Ch.28 p.155 para.3 sent.3 | Hiki lāua i Maui, hanu aʻela ka moʻo, ʻaʻole nō. | They went to Maui; the lizard smelled about; not a trace. |
| Ch.28 p.155 para.3 sent.5 | Hiki lāua i Kauaʻi, hanu aʻela a puni, ʻaʻole i loaʻa. | They came to Kauai; the lizard sniffed about the coast, found nothing; |
| Ch.29 p.157 para.1 sent.4 | I ahona paha a ʻike aku, ʻo kuʻu make nō paha ia, no ka mea, ke makaʻu honua ʻē mai nei nō i kona manawa ʻaʻole me kākou.” | When I think of seeing him, however I may desire it, I am ready to die with fear before he has even come to us." |
| Ch.29 p.157 para.2 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula kona mau hoa, “ʻAʻole ia he akua, he kanaka nō e like me kākou. | Her companions answered, "He is no god; he is a man like us, |
| Ch.29 p.158 para.2 sent.4 | ʻAʻole naʻe e hele loa ana, akā, e hele ana wau e haʻi aku i kēia mea aʻu e kamaʻilio nei iā ʻoukou, a hoʻi mai wau. | not, indeed, for long; but I go to announce those things which I have told you. and shall return hither. |
| Ch.29 p.158 para.3 sent.2 | ʻAʻole e ʻike ʻia kekahi luku ma mua aku e like me ka luku e hiki mai ana, ʻaʻole hoʻi ma hope iho o ka pau ʻana aʻe o kēia luku aʻu e ʻōlelo nei. | never has any destruction been seen before like this which is to come; never
will any come hereafter when this destruction of which I tell is ended. |
| Ch.29 p.158 para.4 sent.1 | “Ma mua o ka hiki ʻana mai o ka mea mana, e hōʻike mai nō ʻo ia i hōʻailona no ka luku ʻana, ʻaʻole ma luna o nā makaʻāinana, ma luna pono iho nō ou, a ʻo kou poʻe. | "Before the coming of the wonder-worker he will give you a sign of destruction, not over all the people of the land, but over you yourself and your people; |
| Ch.29 p.159 para.4 sent.1 | Akā, ʻo Waka, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i hoʻokō, me ka ʻōlelo mai, “Inā he akua ka mea nāna e luku mai, a laila, he akua nō koʻu e hiki ai ke hoʻopakele iaʻu a me kaʻu mau aliʻi.” | But Waka would not listen, and answered, "If a god is the one to bring destruction, then I have another god to save me and my chiefs." |
| Ch.29 p.159 para.5 sent.4 | A hiki i ua lā lā, e moe ana nā luāhine ma nā kapuaʻi o ke keiki mana, me ke noi aku i ola, ʻaʻole e loaʻa, no ka mea, ua hōʻole i ka ʻōlelo a ka makāula nei.” | "When that day comes, the old women will lie down before the soles of the feet of that mighty youth, and plead for life, and not get it, because they have disbelieved the words of the prophet." |
| Ch.30 p.161 para.2 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula nā kaikamāhine, “ʻO ia hoʻi kā mākou i hamumu iho nei, no ka mea, ua lohe mua nō mākou i kēia mea iā ʻoe, ʻoiai, ʻaʻole kēia (Kahalaomāpuana) i hiki mai, a ma kā ia nei hoʻi ʻana mai nei, lohe hope mākou iā ia nei.” | The daughters answered, ''This is what we have been whispering about, for first you told us these things while Kahalaomapuana had not yet returned, and since her return she has told us the same thing again." |
| Ch.30 p.161 para.4 sent.2 | ʻAʻole hoʻi e weliweli. | be not astonished; |
| Ch.30 p.161 para.4 sent.3 | E hiki mai ana ka pōmaikaʻi iā kākou, a e lilo auaneʻi kākou i mea nui nāna e ʻai nā moku a puni, ʻaʻole kekahi mea ʻē aʻe, a e noho aliʻi auaneʻi ʻoukou ma luna o ka ʻāina a e holo aku ka poʻe hana ʻino mai iā ʻoukou mai ka noho aliʻi aku. | we shall prosper and become mighty ones among the islands round about; none shall be above us; and you shall rule over the land, and those who have done evil against you shall flee from you and be chiefs no more. |
| Ch.30 p.163 para.7 sent.1 | “E kuʻu Haku, he weliweli koʻu a me ka haʻalulu nui, a inā i manaʻo ʻoe e lawe i kuʻu ola nei, e pono ke lawe aku, no ka mea, ʻaʻole wau i hālāwai me kekahi mea weliweli nui ma mua e like me kēia,” wahi a Lāʻieikawai. | "My lord, I am amazed and tremble, and if you desire to take my life, it is well; for never have I met before with anyone so terrible as this!" answered Laieikawai. |
| Ch.30 p.163 para.8 sent.1 | “ʻAʻole au i hiki mai e lawe i kou ola, akā, ma ka huakaʻi a kuʻu kaikuahine i hiki aʻe nei i ou lā, a no laila, ua hāʻawi mai wau i hōʻailona noʻu e ʻike ai iā ʻoe, a e maopopo ai iaʻu, ʻo ʻoe kuʻu wahine hoʻopalau. | "I have not come to take your life, but on my sister's visit to me I gave her a sign for me to know you by and recognize you as my betrothed wife; |
| Ch.30 p.165 para.3 sent.1 | I ka makāula i kaʻapuni ai ma muli o ka ʻōlelo a ka hiwahiwa, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i hālāwai me kekahi kanaka hoʻokahi, no ka mea, ua pau i uka o Pihanakalani, kahi i ʻōlelo ʻia he lanakila. | On the seer's circuit, according to the command of the Beloved, he did not encounter a single person, for all had gone up to Pihanakalani, the place where it had been predicted that victory should be accomplished. |
| Ch.30 p.166 para.10 sent.3 | Akā, ʻaʻole i loaʻa ka hewa o kona mau kaikuahine ma ia hope iho a hiki i ka haʻalele ʻana i kēia ao. | But there was no fault to be found with his sisters until they left this world. |
| Ch.31 p.167 para.2 sent.3 | ʻAʻole kekahi mea o ʻoukou i hoʻonele ʻia i ka pōmaikaʻi, akā, ʻo ia nei (Kaʻōnohiokalā) nō ko māua mea e hiki mai i o ʻoukou nei e ʻike i ka pono o ko ʻoukou noho ʻana.” | not one of you lacks fortune. But Kaonohiokala will visit you to look after your welfare." |
| Ch.31 p.168 para.2 sent.4 | ʻAʻole naʻe i hāʻule ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā, i ia manawa, i ka hewa, akā, ua hoʻomaka aʻe kona kuko ʻino e hana i ka mea pono ʻole. | Not at this time, however, did Kaonohiokala fall into sin, but his sinful longing had its beginning. |
| Ch.31 p.169 para.1 sent.2 | Akā, ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i ʻae aku e hoʻi i loko o Keʻalohilani, no ka mea, ua ʻoi aku kona minamina i ka hanohano mau i loaʻa iā ia ma mua o ka hoʻi ʻana i Keʻalohilani. | But Kahalaomapuana would not consent to return to Kealohilani, for she cared more for her former post of honor than to return to Kealohilani. |
| Ch.31 p.169 para.2 sent.4 | ʻAʻole e hui i ko ʻoukou hele ʻana. | do not go together, |
| Ch.31 p.169 para.3 sent.5 | A ʻo Kahalaomāpuana hoʻi, ʻaʻole ʻo ia i huhuki mai ma ke kiliʻoʻopu loloa, huhuki maila ʻo ia ma ka mea liʻiliʻi loa, ʻekolu kapuaʻi paha kona loa, a ʻoki aʻela ʻo ia i ka hapalua o kāna, a hoʻi akula, me ka manaʻo, ʻo kāna kiliʻoʻopu ka pōkole. | and Kahalaomapuana did not pull the tall flowers, she pulled a very short one, about three feet long hers was, and she cut off half and came back, thinking her grass stem was the shortest. |
| Ch.31 p.170 para.2 sent.1 | Kiola akula nā mea i koe i kā lākou, akā, ʻo Kahalaomāpuana, ʻaʻole i hōʻike mai, ʻī mai naʻe “Ua kū iaʻu ka hailona.” | "The others laid down theirs, but Kahalaomapuana did not show hers; said he, "The lot rests upon you." |
| Ch.31 p.170 para.2 sent.4 | ʻAʻole ʻōlelo i koe a Kahalaomāpuana, no ka mea, ua kū ka hailona iā ia. | Kahalaomapuana had nothing left to say, for the lot rested upon her. |
| Ch.31 p.170 para.5 sent.4 | ʻAʻole naʻe no koʻu makemake e hoʻi i ia ʻāina, akā, na koʻu lima nō i ʻae iaʻu e haʻalele iā ʻoukou ma muli o ka hailona a kuʻu kaikunāne lani nei. | it was not my wish to go back to this land, but my hand decided my leaving you according to the lot laid by my divine brother. |
| Ch.31 p.170 para.5 sent.5 | Akā hoʻi, ua ʻike nō wau he mau akua like ko kākou a pau, ʻaʻole mea nele. | But I know that every one of us has a god, no one is without; |
| Ch.31 p.171 para.1 sent.2 | He ʻike hiki he hana ʻia kekahi hana ma kahi malū, a he kaikamahine manaʻopaʻa nō, ʻaʻole e hoʻopilimeaʻai, o manaʻo auaneʻi ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā, o haʻi ʻia kāna hana kalohe ʻana i mua o Moanalihaikawaokele, no laila ʻo ia i hoʻokaʻawale ai i kona kaikuahine. | who could see things done in secret; and she was a resolute girl, not one to give in. Kaonohiokala thought she might disclose to Moanalihaikawaokele this evil doing;
so he got his sister away, |
| Ch.31 p.171 para.2 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe ʻo ia i hoʻokō koke i ia manawa, akā, i mea e pono ai ʻo ia i mua o Kekalukaluokēwā, no laila, waiho akula ʻo ia i mua o Kekalukaluokēwā e pani ma ka hakahaka o Kahalaomāpuana, a ʻo ka makāula nō kona kuhina nui, a hoʻonoho ʻia akula ʻo Mailehaʻiwale i kiaʻāina paha no Kauaʻi, iā Mailekaluhea no Oʻahu, ʻo Mailelauliʻi no Maui a me nā moku ʻē aʻe; iā Mailepākaha no Hawaiʻi. | Not just at that time, but he made things right with Kekalukaluokewa by putting him in Kahalaomapuana's place and the seer as his chief counsellor. Mailehaiwale was made governor on Kauai, Mailekaluhea on Oahu, Mailelaulii on Maui and the other islands, Mailepakaha on Hawaii. |
| Ch.32 p.173 para.2 sent.2 | Ma kēlā hoʻi ʻana ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā, ʻaʻole naʻe ʻo ia i hiki loa i luna, akā, ua ʻike naʻe ʻo ia i ia lā e holo ana nā waʻa o Kekalukaluokēwā i ka moana, a no ia mea, hoʻi hou maila ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā mai luna mai a hiki i lalo nei, a launa ihola me Lāʻielohelohe; ʻaʻole naʻe i hana ʻia ka hewa i ia manawa. | When Kaonohiokala started to return he did not go all the way up, but just watched that day the sailing of Kekalukaluokewa's canoes over the ocean. Then Kaonohiokala came back down and sought the companionship of Laielohelohe, but not just then was the sin committed. |
| Ch.32 p.174 para.2 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ʻo Lāʻielohelohe, “ʻAʻole kāua e launa kino, e kuʻu Lani, no ka mea, ʻo ka mea nāna i mālama iaʻu mai kuʻu wā ʻuʻuku mai a loaʻa wale kuʻu kāne, nāna ka ʻōlelo paʻa ma oʻu lā, ʻaʻole e hāʻawi i kuʻu kino me kahi mea ʻē aʻe e hoʻohaumia. | Said Laielohelohe, "We can not touch one another, my high one, for the one who brought me up from the time I was born until I found my husband, he has strictly bound me not to defile my flesh with anyone; |
| Ch.32 p.174 para.3 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i anahulu kona mau lā i luna, uhi paʻapū hou ʻia maila ʻo ia e nā hekili o ke kuko ʻino, a hiki ʻole ke hoʻomanawanui no ke kuko. | He had not been ten days there when he was again thick-pressed by the thunders of his evil lust, and he could not hold out against it. |
| Ch.32 p.174 para.4 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe no ke kāʻili loa mai, akā, i mea e hoʻomāmā aʻe ai i koʻu naʻau kaumaha i ke kuko i kāu milimili, no ka mea, ua noi mua aku wau i ua milimili lā āu i kuʻu makemake, akā, ua kuhikuhi mai kēlā nāu e ʻae aku. | not to take her away altogether, but to ease my heavy heart of its lust after your foster child; for I first begged my boon of her, but she sent me for your consent, |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole wau i moe iki i ka hoʻopahupahu wale ʻia nō a ao wale.” | I never slept, there was a drumming all night long." |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.4 sent.1 | “ʻAe paha,” wahi a Lāʻieikawai, “ʻaʻole nō lā hoʻi e iho?” | "Perhaps so," said Laieikawai. "Why not go down and see?" |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.4 sent.3 | Akā, ʻo Lāʻielohelohe, ʻaʻole i loaʻa iā ia kona pilikia ma ka manaʻo, he aha lā i ia mea i kona manaʻo ʻana! | But Laielohelohe never thought of harm; what was that to her mind! |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.5 sent.1 | Iā lāua e hui ana ma ka makemake o ke aliʻi kāne, i ia manawa, ua ʻike ʻole ʻo Lāʻielohelohe i kona aloha iā Kaʻōnohiokalā, no ka mea, ʻaʻole nō ʻo ke aliʻi wahine makemake iki e hana i ka hewa me ke aliʻi nui o luna, aia hoʻi, ma muli o ka ʻonou a kona mea nāna i mālama wale nō ka hoʻokō ʻana. | When they met at the chief's wish, Laielohelohe did not love Kaonohiokala, for the princess did not wish to commit sin with the great chief from the heavens, but to satisfy her guardian's greed. |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.7 sent.1 | I kekahi lā ma ke ahiahi, ʻōlelo akula ʻo Lāʻielohelohe iā Kapūkaʻihaoa, “E kuʻu kahu nāna i mālama maikaʻi, i kēia manawa, ua pōʻino loa iaʻu ka manaʻo no Kaʻōnohiokalā i loko o nā manawa o māua i hana iho nei i ka hewa, a ke hoʻomāhuahua mai nei ke aloha o kuʻu kāne (Kekalukaluokēwā) iaʻu, no ka mea, i ka noho iho nei nō kā i ka pono me ke kāne, me ko māua maikaʻi, a lalau wale nō i ka hewa, ʻaʻole no koʻu makemake, no kou makemake wale nō. | One day in the evening Laielohelohe said to Kapukaihaoa, "My good guard and protector, I am sorry for my sin with Kaonohiokala, and love grows within me for Kekalukaluokewa, my husband; good and happy has been our life together, and I sinned not by my own wish, but through your wish alone. |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.7 sent.2 | He aha nō lā hoʻi kou hewa ke hōʻole aku, i kuhikuhi aku hoʻi wau i kou ʻae ʻole no kou hoʻohiki ʻana, ʻaʻole au e launa me kekahi mea ʻē aʻe. | What harm had you refused? I referred the matter to you because of your binding me not to keep companionship with anyone; |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.7 sent.3 | Kainoa he hoʻohiki paʻa kāu, ʻaʻole kā!” | I thought you would keep your oath; not so!" |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.8 sent.3 | ʻAʻole hoʻi au i manaʻo ʻia ka mea nāna ka wahine i wahine ai ʻo ia.” | Little he thought of me from whom he got his wife." |
| Ch.32 p.175 para.9 sent.1 | ʻĪ aku ʻo Lāʻielohelohe i kona kahu nāna i hānai, “Inā ʻo kou kumu ia o ka hāʻawi ʻana i kuʻu kino e hoʻohaumia me Kaʻōnohiokalā, a laila, ua hewa loa ʻoe, no ka mea, ua ʻike ʻoe, ʻaʻole no Kekalukaluokēwā i hoʻonoho nā mea ma luna o nā ʻāina, akā, no Kaʻōnohiokalā nō. | Said Laielohelohe to her foster father, "If that is why you have given me over to sin with Kaonohiokala, then you have done very wrong, for you know the rulers over the islands were not appointed by Kekalukaluokewa, but by Kaonohiokala; |
| Ch.32 p.176 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe ʻo ia (Kaʻōnohiokalā) i hiki mai a hiki i kona hala ʻana i ka moana i ia pō iho. | but he did not come until that night when she had left and was out at sea. |
| Ch.32 p.176 para.3 sent.1 | Iā Lāʻielohelohe paha i Oʻahu, a ma kekahi lā aʻe, iho hou maila ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā e launa hou me Lāʻielohelohe, akā, i kona hiki ʻana mai, ʻaʻole ʻo Lāʻielohelohe i ka hale aliʻi. | About the time that Laielohelohe was come to Oahu, that next day Kaonohiokala came again to visit Laielohelohe; but on his arrival, no Laielohelohe at the chief's house; |
| Ch.32 p.176 para.3 sent.2 | ʻAʻole nō hoʻi ʻo ia i nīnau mai i ka mea nāna e mālama ka hale aliʻi, no ka mea, inā e nīnau ʻo ia, manaʻo ʻia e hana ana i ka hewa me Lāʻielohelohe. | he did not question the guard for fear of his suspecting his sin with Laielohelohe. |
| Ch.32 p.176 para.4 sent.2 | A no ka lohe ʻana o ʻAiwohikupua i ko Lāʻielohelohe kumu i holo ai e ʻimi i ke kāne, a laila, ʻī aku ʻo ia i ke kiaʻi hale aliʻi, “Inā i hoʻi hou mai ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā, a i nīnau mai iā Lāʻielohelohe, ʻī aku ʻoe ua maʻi ia, a laila, ʻaʻole e hoʻi hou mai, no ka mea, he mea haumia loa ia iā Kaʻōnohiokalā a me nā mākua o mākou. | And when he heard Laielohelohe's reason for setting sail to seek her husband, then he said to the palace guard, "If Kaonohiokala returns again, and asks for Laielohelohe, tell him she is ill, then he will not come back, for she would pollute Kaonohiokala and our parents; |
| Ch.33 p.177 para.2 sent.1 | Holo akula ʻo ia ma nā waʻa a pae ma Honuaʻula, i laila, lohe lākou, ʻo Hinaikamalama ka wahine a Kekalukaluokēwā; ʻaʻole naʻe i ʻike ko Honuaʻula poʻe, ʻo kā Kekalukaluokēwā wahine kēia. | She sailed by canoe and came to Honuaula; there they heard that Hinaikamalama was Kekalukaluokewa's wife; the Honuaula people did not know that this was his wife. |
| Ch.33 p.178 para.3 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe e hiki iā lāua ke ʻike aʻe i kēia, no ka mea, ua lumilumi ʻia lāua e ka ʻona a ka ʻawa. | nor did they know this; for they were drunk with awa. |
| Ch.33 p.178 para.4 sent.1 | ʻO ia hoʻi, ʻaʻole e hiki iā Lāʻielohelohe ke hoʻomanawanui i kona ukiuki iā Hinaikamalama, no laila, komo akula ʻo ia ma waena o lāua a pale akula iā Hinaikamalama, hoʻohuli maila iā Kekalukaluokēwā, a apo akula i kāna kāne a hoʻāla akula. | Then Laielohelohe did not stay her anger against Hinaikamalama, so she got between them, pushed Hinaikamalama away, took Kekalukaluokewa and embraced him, and wakened him. |
| Ch.33 p.178 para.4 sent.3 | I ia wā, hikilele maila ʻo Hinaikamalama mai ka hiamoe mai a ʻike ihola, he wahine ʻē kēia me lāua, holo akula ʻo ia mai o lāua nei aku me ka huhū nui, me ka manaʻo hoʻi, ʻaʻole kēia ʻo kā Kekalukaluokēwā wahine. | just then, Hinaikamalama waked suddenly from sleep and saw this strange woman with them; she ran away from them in a rage, not knowing this was Kekalukaluokewa's wife. |
| Ch.33 p.178 para.7 sent.5 | ʻAʻole naʻe no koʻu makemake ka hāʻawi aku iā ʻoe, akā, no ka makaʻu i ka make.” | it was not for my pleasure that I gave you up, but for fear of death." |
| Ch.33 p.179 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe i māhuahua. | not many times, |
| Ch.33 p.179 para.1 sent.5 | Akā, e kuʻu kāne, ʻaʻole naʻu i ʻae e hāʻawi iaʻu e hoʻohaumia i kuʻu kino me ua haku lā o kāua, akā, na kuʻu mea nāna i mālama iaʻu i ʻae e hana wau i ka hewa, no ka mea, i ka lā a ʻoukou i hele mai ai, ʻo ia nō ka lā a ua haku lā o kāua i noi mai ai iaʻu e hoʻohaumia iā māua, akā, no koʻu makemake ʻole, no laila, ua kuhikuhi aku wau i koʻu ʻae ʻole iā ia. | but, my husband, it was not I who consented to defile my body with our lord, but it was my guardian who permitted the sin; for on the day when you went away, that very day our lord asked me to defile myself; but I did not wish it, therefore I referred my refusal to him; |
| Ch.33 p.179 para.1 sent.10 | ʻAʻole āu hana noʻu, ʻaʻole hoʻi aʻu hana aku iā ʻoe. | I have nothing to complain of you, you have nothing to complain of me; |
| Ch.33 p.180 para.3 sent.2 | Noho ihola lākou ma ia lā a ahiahi, hoʻi akula i ka hale, kēnā maila nā mākua a me nā kahu e ʻai, akā, ʻaʻole loaʻa iā ia ka ʻono o ka ʻai, no ka mea, ua pouli i ke aloha. | They sat there until evening, then they returned to the house; her parents and her attendants commanded her to eat, but she had no appetite for food because of her love. |
| Ch.33 p.180 para.9 sent.1 | ʻAʻole anei he uilani, a kaniʻuhū mai i kekahi manawa no ka wahine?” | Does he not struggle and groan sometimes for the woman?" |
| Ch.33 p.181 para.1 sent.1 | ʻĪ akula ʻo Lāʻielohelohe, “ʻAʻole, he maikaʻi loa māua e noho nei.” | Said Laielohelohe, "No; all is well with us." |
| Ch.33 p.181 para.3 sent.6 | Hoʻi aʻe kuʻu kāne, a ʻōlelo iaʻu, ʻaʻole naʻe wau i hoʻomaopopo. | my husband returned and told me, but I was not sure. |
| Ch.33 p.181 para.3 sent.12 | ʻAʻole āna ʻōlelo ʻia, ʻaʻole hoʻi a māua ʻōlelo iā ia. | and we did not speak to him nor he to us; |
| Ch.34 p.183 para.1 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe ʻo ia i wikiwiki i ka huhū, akā, i mea e maopopo leʻa ai iā ia, hoʻomanawanui nō ʻo Lāʻielohelohe. | not at once did she show her rage; but she waited but to make sure. |
| Ch.34 p.183 para.2 sent.2 | ʻAʻole naʻe i ʻike mai kāna kāne i kēia hana maʻalea a kāna wahine, a i ka hoʻi ʻana aku i ka hale, hāʻawi mua ihola ua ʻo Lāʻielohelohe iā ia i ka hiamoe nui ma kona ʻano maʻalea. | and afterwards her husband did not know of his wife's guile, and she returned to the house, and Laielohelohe lay down and pretended to sleep. |
| Ch.34 p.183 para.4 sent.4 | A no laila, ua loaʻa maopopo aʻe nei ʻolua iaʻu, no laila, ke ʻōlelo nei wau iā ʻoe, ʻaʻole e pono iā kāua ke hoʻomanawanui i ka noho ʻana ma ʻaneʻi. | now I have found you two, I tell you it is not right to endure this any longer. |
| Ch.34 p.185 para.1 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe i holo, no ka mea, ua hōʻōmaʻimaʻi aʻela ʻo Kekalukaluokēwā, a no laila, ua hala i ia pō, a i kekahi pō iho, hana hou nō ʻo Kekalukaluokēwā i kāna hana, a no ia mea, ua haʻalele ʻo Lāʻielohelohe i kona aloha i kāna kāne, a hoʻi akula i Kauaʻi ma kona mau waʻa me kona manaʻo hou ʻole aku iā Kekalukaluokēwā. | but they did not, for Kekalukaluokewa pretended to be ill, and they postponed going that night. The next day he did the same thing again, so Laielohelohe gave up her love for her husband and returned to Kauai with her canoe, without thinking again of Kekalukaluokewa. |
| Ch.34 p.185 para.3 sent.4 | No ka mea, ʻaʻole ʻoe pēlā e hele nei.” | You have not done so before." |
| Ch.34 p.185 para.5 sent.2 | I ia manawa nō a lāua e kamaʻilio ana no kēia mau mea, haʻalele akula ʻo Kaʻōnohiokalā iā Lāʻieikawai, a iho maila, me ka manaʻo o Lāʻieikawai, e kiʻi ana ma muli o kāna kauoha, ʻaʻole kā! | Therefore. Kaonohiokala left Laieikawai and went away, as Laieikawai thought, to carry out her command. Not so! |
| Ch.34 p.185 para.6 sent.1 | I kēia hele ʻana o Kaʻōnohiokalā, hoʻokahi makahiki i ia manawa, ʻaʻole ʻo kana mai ʻo ka haʻohaʻo o Lāʻieikawai no ka hele lōʻihi o kāna kāne. | On this journey Kaonohiokala stayed away a year; now Laieikawai did not think her husband's long stay strange, |
| Ch.34 p.185 para.7 sent.4 | Akā, i ka hele ʻana aku nei, ʻaʻole i hoʻi mai, ʻo ka pau kēia o ka makahiki o ka hele ʻana; ʻaʻole i hoʻi mai. | but he has not come back, and it is a year since he went, |
| Ch.34 p.187 para.1 sent.5 | ʻAʻole ia he manu maoli, he mau manu lāʻau ia. | they are not real birds, only wooden birds; |
| Ch.34 p.187 para.6 sent.3 | ʻAʻole naʻe i liʻuliʻu ma hope iho o ko Kaʻōnohiokalā haʻohaʻo ʻana. | not for long was Kaonohiokala left to wonder. |
| Ch.34 p.189 para.2 sent.1 | A ʻōlelo maila ʻo Moanalihaikawaokele i mua o Kaʻōnohiokalā, “Ua hewa kāu hana, e Kaʻōnohiokalā ē, no ka mea, ua haumia loa ʻoe, a no laila, ʻaʻole e loaʻa hou iā ʻoe he wahi noho i loko o Kahakaekaea, a ʻo kou uku hoʻopaʻi, e lilo ana ʻoe i mea e hoʻomākaʻukaʻu ʻia ai ma nā alanui, a ma ka puka o nā hale, a ʻo kou inoa, he lapu, a ʻo kāu mea e ʻai ai, ʻo nā pulelehua, a ma laila kou kuleana a mau i kāu pua.” | And Moanalihaikawaokele said to Kaonohiokala, "You have sinned, O Kaonohiokala, for you have defiled yourself and, therefore, you shall no longer have a place to dwell within Kahakaekaea, and the penalty you shall pay, to become a fearsome thing on the highway and at the doors of houses, and your name is Lapu, Vanity, and for your food you shall eat moths; and thus shall you live and your posterity." |
| Ch.34 p.189 para.5 sent.1 | Iā lākou ma Kahakaekaea, i kekahi manawa, nui maila ke aloha o Lāʻieikawai iā Lāʻielohelohe, akā, ʻaʻole e hiki ma kona manaʻo. | At Kahakaekaea, sometimes Laieikawai longed for Laielohelohe, but she could do nothing; |
| Ch.34 p.189 para.6 sent.1 | ʻĪ mai naʻe ʻo Moanalihaikawaokele, “ʻAʻole e ʻae ʻia kou kaikaina e noho pū me kākou, no ka mea, ua haumia ʻo ia iā Kaʻōnohiokalā, akā, inā he manaʻo kou i ko kaikaina, a laila, e hoʻi ʻoe, a e pani ma ka hakahaka o Kekalukaluokēwā.” | Said Moanalihaikawaokele, "Your sister can not live here with us, for she is defiled with Kaonohiokala; but if you want your sister, then you go and fill Kekalukaluokewa's place." |
| Ch.34 p.191 para.1 sent.2 | E noho malū ʻoe a hiki i kou manawa e make ai, a ma kēia lā aku, ʻaʻole e kapa ʻia kou inoa ʻo Lāʻieikawai, akā, ʻo kou inoa mau ʻo KAWAHINEOKALIʻULĀ, a ma ia inoa ou e kūkulu aku ai kou hanauna iā ʻoe, a ʻo ʻoe nō ke akua o kou mau hanauna.” | and live virgin until your death, and from this time forth your name shall be no longer called Laieikawai, but your name shall be 'The Woman of the Twilight,' and by this name shall all your kin bow down to you and you shall be like a god to them." |