Ka tu a Au hi noa te Ata.
From "Sacred Songs and Solos," No. 385.
"Inamata! puta whakarere ana te koa kite hunga tahuri. No te mea i whakao i runga ite ngaru te reo o tetahi kaipuke,' I whai mai tenei ki te whakaora; ka tu atu a au, hi noa te ata.'" E ! KA piki-tu te ngaru, Keri noa te hau! Mawai hoki ra e tua ? A, e whakakau 1 Na! e hari! Ha! ko Ihu; nei ra Tana ki,— "Ka tu a Au, hi noa te ata; hei whakaora ; kei hopipi." E! ka huri papa-nui, Waenga noa o tai; Rere-hu nga tuatea, Kowai ano hei whai ? Na! e hari! Ha! ko Ihu; nei ra Tana ki, &c. Peke mai i ena mate, Ki a Ihu ra; Mana koe e whakaora Pu, i tenei wa. Na! e hari! Ha! ko Ihu; nei ra Tana ki, &c. Hore atu ra he ora, A, he Ingoa ke, Hei pupuri mo te ngakau, O te hunga he. Na! e hari! Ha! ko Ihu; nei ra Tana ki, &c. A-Karana, Hanuere, 1884.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KORIM18840115.2.40
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Korimako, Issue 23, 15 January 1884, Page 9
Word count
Tapeke kupu
180Ka tu a Au hi noa te Ata. Korimako, Issue 23, 15 January 1884, Page 9
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Tūnga manatārua: Kua pau te manatārua (i Aotearoa). Ka pā ko ētahi atu tikanga.
Te whakamahi anō: E whakaae ana Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa The National Library of New Zealand he mauri tō ēnei momo taonga, he wairua ora tōna e honoa ai te taonga kikokiko ki te iwi nāna taua taonga i tārei i te tuatahi. He kaipupuri noa mātou i ēnei taonga, ā, ko te inoia kia tika tō pupuri me tō kawe i te taonga nei, kia hāngai katoa hoki tō whakamahinga anō i ngā matū o roto ki ngā mātāpono e kīa nei Principles for the Care and Preservation of Māori Materials – Te Mauri o te Mātauranga : Purihia, Tiakina! (i whakahoutia i te tau 2018) – e wātea mai ana i te pae tukutuku o Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa National Library of New Zealand.
Out of copyright (New Zealand). Other considerations apply.
The National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa acknowledges that taonga (treasures) such as this have mauri, a living spirit, that connects a physical object to the kinship group involved in its creation. As kaipupuri (holders) of this taonga, we ask that you treat it with respect and ensure that any reuse of the material is in line with the Library’s Principles for the Care and Preservation of Māori Materials – Te Mauri o te Mātauranga: Purihia, Tiakina! (revised 2018) – available on the National Library of New Zealand’s website.