Hawaii
prev.
play.
mark.
next.

1:19:04
Father!
1:19:07
Father!
1:19:09
Father!
1:19:21
He's over here,
Reverend Quigley.

1:19:25
Why, it's Brother Quigley!
Welcome to Lahaina.

1:19:31
You should have let me know
you were coming.

1:19:32
It's only for a short visit.
I'm just recently back from Boston.

1:19:36
Yes, I saw your grandparents, Micah.
1:19:38
- Who?
- The Bromleys. They send greetings.

1:19:41
Micah, take Reverend Quigley's
bag along to the house.

1:19:44
Thank you, Micah.
1:19:45
Come, we have much to discuss.
1:19:47
It's lovely back in Walpole.
1:19:49
I'd forgotten how beautiful
the autumns can be there.

1:19:52
Did you get back
in time for the Annual Meeting?

1:19:54
- Yes, we missed you, Brother Hale.
- Well, I was unable to get away.

1:19:58
We are engaged in a great
struggle with the sugar planters here.

1:20:02
- Yes, I've heard reports of it.
- Their lust for land grows every day.

1:20:07
I finished helping my Hawaiians
draft a petition to the king

1:20:10
that no more land be sold
to the planters or any other foreigner.

1:20:13
- Indeed?
- Yes.

1:20:15
And also we are assembling regularly
in meetings of public protest.

1:20:19
- In your church?
- Yes, of course!

1:20:21
What purer purpose
can our churches be put to

1:20:24
than to protect the Hawaiians' land?
1:20:27
Their land is their life,
Brother Quigley.

1:20:30
Malama understood that.
1:20:32
Every church in the kingdom
must stand forth as a bastion

1:20:35
against those who would rob
these people of their birthright.

1:20:39
And the walls are two feet thick.
1:20:42
As you see, of course.
1:20:46
I left the windows uncovered, though.
It's cooler that way.

1:20:49
And the wind...
1:20:52
can blow through.
1:20:56
Of course, there is no Alii Nui...
left to die.


prev.
next.