
In a secluded mountain pool on a remote Pacific island, a wandering boy from a far‑off land sits beside a girl weaving a basket and singing an old song. She recounts the legend of Luliban, a woman bound to a powerful chief, a white sailor called Red‑Hair, and a tattooed beachcomber named Harry from Yap. Their intertwined fates spark rivalry and whispered intrigue, set against a backdrop of fishing, trade, and the raw beauty of cliffs and surf that frame the pool.
The tale unfolds through vivid oral storytelling, where the tension between Red‑Hair’s wealth and Harry’s charismatic songs fuels a simmering conflict. Listeners hear the clash of cultures, the pull of honor, and the delicate balance of love and jealousy that could reshape the island community. Rich sound design and layered narration bring the tropical world to life, inviting the audience to feel the heat of the sun, the cool mist of the water, and the pulse of a legend passed down through generations.
Full title
The Ebbing Of The Tide South Sea Stories - 1896
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (332K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2008-03-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1855–1913
A wandering storyteller of the South Pacific, he turned years of seafaring and island travel into vivid adventure tales and sketches of colonial life. His fiction and memoir-like writing helped bring the islands of Melanesia and Polynesia to a wide English-speaking readership.
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