Of Tiki little is preserved: his great work was that of making
man, which he is said to have done after his own image. One
account states, that he took red clay and kneaded it with his
own blood, and so formed the eyes and limbs, and then gave
the image breath. Another, that man was formed of clay, and the
red ochreous water of swamps, and that Tiki bestowed both his
own form and name upon him, calling him Tiki-ahua, or Tiki's
likeness.
Taylor, Richard, Te Ika a Maui or New Zealand and its Inhabitants, London: Wertheim and Macintosh, 1855, p. 23.
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