{"id":"01KG8AKWR3ZSBH4RT9DYBA3GJ3","cid":"bafkreidugudgsujpbc3o2tumhtiyzqak4odksyg4jtjgq4j2tqu5basnru","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":4243,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:15.149Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 2","source_file":"01KG89J1H7Y803CZ7X80F0QFHZ","start_line":4168,"text":"and I, who lay side by side, thinking the occasion better adapted to\r\nmeditation, kept pretty silent; and, before long, the rest ceased\r\nconversing, and, wearied with loss of rest on board the frigate, were\r\nsoon sound asleep.\r\n\r\nAfter sliding from one reverie into another, I started, and gave the\r\ndoctor a pinch. He was dreaming, however; and, resolved to follow his\r\nexample, I troubled him no more.\r\n\r\nHow the rest managed, I know not; but for my own part, I found it very\r\nhard to get to sleep. The consciousness of having one’s foot pinned;\r\nand the impossibility of getting it anywhere else than just where it\r\nwas, was most distressing.\r\n\r\nBut this was not all: there was no way of lying but straight on your\r\nback; unless, to be sure, one’s limb went round and round in the ankle,\r\nlike a swivel. Upon getting into a sort of doze, it was no wonder this\r\nuneasy posture gave me the nightmare. Under the delusion that I was\r\nabout some gymnastics or other, I gave my unfortunate member such a\r\ntwitch that I started up with the idea that someone was dragging the\r\nstocks away.\r\n\r\nCaptain Bob and his friends lived in a little hamlet hard by; and when\r\nmorning showed in the East, the old gentleman came forth from that\r\ndirection likewise, emerging from a grove, and saluting us loudly as he\r\napproached.\r\n\r\nFinding everybody awake, he set us at liberty; and, leading us down to\r\nthe stream, ordered every man to strip and bathe.\r\n\r\n“All han’s, my boy, hanna-hanna, wash!” he cried. Bob was a linguist,\r\nand had been to sea in his day, as he many a time afterwards told us.\r\n\r\nAt this moment, we were all alone with him; and it would have been the\r\neasiest thing in the world to have given him the slip; but he seemed to\r\nhave no idea of such a thing; treating us so frankly and cordially,\r\nindeed, that even had we thought of running, we should have been\r\nashamed of attempting it. He very well knew, nevertheless (as we\r\nourselves were not slow in finding out), that, for various reasons, any\r\nattempt of the kind, without some previously arranged plan for leaving\r\nthe island, would be certain to fail.\r\n\r\nAs Bob was a rare one every way, I must give some account of him. There\r\nwas a good deal of “personal appearance” about him; in short, he was a\r\ncorpulent giant, over six feet in height, and literally as big round as\r\na hogshead. The enormous bulk of some of the Tahitians has been\r\nfrequently spoken of by voyagers.\r\n\r\nBeside being the English consul’s jailer, as it were, he carried on a\r\nlittle Tahitian farming; that is to say, he owned several groves of the\r\nbread-fruit and palm, and never hindered their growing. Close by was a\r\n“taro” patch of his which he occasionally visited.\r\n\r\nBob seldom disposed of the produce of his lands; it was all needed for\r\ndomestic consumption. Indeed, for gormandizing, I would have matched\r\nhim against any three common-council men at a civic feast.\r\n\r\nA friend of Bob’s told me that, owing to his voraciousness, his visits\r\nto other parts of the island were much dreaded; for, according to\r\nTahitian customs, hospitality without charge is enjoined upon everyone;\r\nand though it is reciprocal in most cases, in Bob’s it was almost out\r\nof the question. The damage done to a native larder in one of his\r\nmorning calls was more than could be made good by his entertainer’s\r\nspending the holidays with them.\r\n\r\nThe old man, as I have hinted, had, once upon a time, been a cruise or\r\ntwo in a whaling-vessel; and, therefore, he prided himself upon his\r\nEnglish. Having acquired what he knew of it in the forecastle, he\r\ntalked little else than sailor phrases, which sounded whimsically\r\nenough.\r\n\r\nI asked him one day how old he was. “Olee?” he exclaimed, looking very\r\nprofound in consequence of thoroughly understanding so subtile a\r\nquestion—“Oh! very olee—’tousand ’ear—more—big man when Capin Tootee\r\n(Captain Cook) heavey in sight.” (In sea parlance, came into view.)\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 2"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG8AJJFYZ37HSPDVFTEVEPDD","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG89J1H7Y803CZ7X80F0QFHZ","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AKWR3FBM0QAC1MXS6XV2P","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG8AKWR3M7HFCQYMYYXN32N7","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:19.203Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:48:26.733Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}