A first-person narrator recounts an extended stay among an indigenous valley community in the South Seas after leaving his vessel, blending vivid scenes of daily life, landscape, and ritual with episodic adventure. The narrative shifts between close ethnographic observation and personal reflection, supplying sensory description, encounters with outsiders, and ambiguous assessments of missionary influence. Through alternating anecdote and meditation, it explores cultural difference, the tension between fascination and fear of the unfamiliar, and the difficulty of representing another way of life, culminating in circumstances that prompt the narrator to leave the valley and rejoin the wider world.