TEXT D The stranger could not
have been more than twenty-five years of age, and was a little above the
ordinary: height; had he been a single hair’s breadth taller, the matchless
symmetry of his form would have been destroyed. His unclad limbs were
beautifully formed; whilst the elegant outline of his figure, together with his
beardless cheeks, might have entitled him to the distinction of standing for the
statue of the Polynesian Apollo; and indeed the oval of his countenance and the
regularity of every feature reminded me of an antique bust. But the marble
repose of. art was supplied by a warmth and liveliness of expression only to be
seen in the South Sea Islander under the most favorable developments of nature.
The hair of Marnoo was a rich curling brown, and twined about his temples and
neck in little close curling ringlet, which danced up and down continually when
he was animated in conversation. His cheek was of a feminine softness, and his
face was free from the least blemish of tattooing, although the rest of his body
was drawn all over with fanciful figures, which--like the unconnected sketching
usual among these natives--appeared to have been executed in conformity with
some general design. The tattooing on his back in particular
attracted my attention. The artist employed must indeed have excelled in his
profession. Traced along the course of the spine was accurately delineated the
slender, tapering, and diamond-checkered shaft of the beautiful "artu" tree.
Branching from the stem on each side, and disposed alternately, were the
graceful branches drooping with leaves all correctly drawn, and elaborately
finished. In- deed, this piece of tattooing was the best specimen of the Fine
Arts I had yet seen in Typee. A rear view of the stranger might have suggested
the idea of a spreading vine tacked against an infinite variety of figures;
every one of which, however, appeared to have reference to the general effect
sought to be produced. The tattooing I have described was of the brightest blue,
and when contrasted with the light olive-color of the skin, produced a unique
and even elegant effect. A slight girdle of white tappa, scarcely two inches in
width, but hanging before and behind in spreading tassels, composed the entire
costume of the stranger. He advanced surrounded by the
islanders, carrying under one arm a small roll of the native cloth, and grasping
in his other hand a long and richly decorated spear. His mariner was that of a
traveler conscious that he is approaching a comfortable stage in his journey.
Every moment he turned good-humoredly to the throng around him, and gave some
dashing sort of reply to their incessant queries, which appeared to convulse
them with uncontrolled mirth. (457) The writer means for this passage to appeal to the reader’s ______.