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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64112 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64112)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Kaipara, or experiences of a settler in
-North New Zealand, by Peter W. Barlow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Kaipara, or experiences of a settler in North New Zealand
-
-Author: Peter W. Barlow
-
-Release Date: December 22, 2020 [eBook #64112]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Image source(s): https://archive.org/details/kaiparaorexperie00barliala/
-
-Produced by: Fay Dunn, Fiona Holmes and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KAIPARA, OR EXPERIENCES OF A
-SETTLER IN NORTH NEW ZEALAND ***
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
-Changes made are noted at the end of the book.
-
-
-
-
-KAIPARA.
-
-
-
-
- Ballantyne Press
- BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO.
- EDINBURGH AND LONDON
-
-[Illustration: KAIPARA.]
-
-
-
-
- KAIPARA
-
- OR
-
- _EXPERIENCES OF A SETTLER IN
- NORTH NEW ZEALAND_
-
-
- Written and Illustrated
- BY
- P. W. BARLOW
-
-
- _SECOND EDITION._
-
-
- LONDON
- SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON
- _LIMITED_
-
- St. Dunstan's House
- FETTER LANE, FLEET STREET, E.C.
- 1889
-
-
-
-
- Inscribed
-
- TO
-
- _W.H. BARLOW, ESQ., F.R.S._,
- OF HIGH COMBE, OLD CHARLTON,
-
- AS A TOKEN OF
-
- DEEP RESPECT, GRATITUDE, AND AFFECTION.
-
- BY HIS NEPHEW,
-
- _THE NARRATOR_.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The fact that nothing has hitherto been published concerning life in
-this part of New Zealand from the pen of a _bona-fide_ settler has
-induced me to write the following pages.
-
-Before commencing the undertaking, I had been at considerable pains to
-satisfy myself of the truth of this fact, and naturally so, for it is
-the life-buoy I cling to as I take this, my first dip, in the sea of
-literature; it is my one excuse for troubling the public, and in it
-consists my hope that they will consent to be troubled.
-
-I do not pretend to literary talent, and my highest ambition is to lay
-the true narrative of my experiences in New Zealand before the public
-in a readable form. If successful in doing this, I shall be content,
-and trust that my readers will be also.
-
-Many books have been written describing colonial life in this and other
-parts, in some of which the writers have identified themselves with
-the characters in their stories; but these have invariably been the
-works of _visitors to the colony_, not _settlers in it_.
-
-There is to my mind as much difference between the two experiences as
-there is between the experience of a _volunteer_ and that of a _soldier
-of the line_, and it is on this account that I approach the public with
-some small degree of confidence, and venture to lay before my readers
-the experiences of a settler in North New Zealand.
-
- THE NARRATOR.
-
- MATAKOHE, KAIPARA, PROVINCE OF AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. OUR ARRIVAL IN THE NEW COUNTRY 1
-
- II. AN AUCKLAND TABLE-D'HÔTE 7
-
- III. A CHAT ABOUT AUCKLAND 14
-
- IV. MORE ABOUT AUCKLAND 21
-
- V. MY FIRST RAILWAY JOURNEY 27
-
- VI. LIVING IN NEW ZEALAND 33
-
- VII. A PERILOUS JOURNEY 40
-
- VIII. THE "TERROR" 50
-
- IX. A SALE BY AUCTION 60
-
- X. THE FAITHLESS MARY ANN 66
-
- XI. MY INTRODUCTION TO KAIPARA 72
-
- XII. A WILD PIG HUNT 80
-
- XIII. PURCHASING LIVE-STOCK 88
-
- XIV. A COLONIAL BALL 102
-
- XV. THE FORESTS OF NORTH NEW ZEALAND 107
-
- XVI. THE LABOURING-MAN SETTLER 118
-
- XVII. KAIPARA FISH 125
-
- XVIII. GODWIT SHOOTING 135
-
- XIX. THE KAURI GUMDIGGER 142
-
- XX. A STORY OF A BUSHRANGER 159
-
- XXI. SPORTS 166
-
- XXII. SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT IN NEW ZEALAND 176
-
- XXIII. KAIPARA INSECTS 183
-
- XXIV. A MAORI WEDDING 194
-
- XXV. SYSTEM OF EDUCATION IN NEW ZEALAND 201
-
- XXVI. A MEETING OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL 206
-
- XXVII. CONCLUSION 212
-
-
-
-
-KAIPARA.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-_OUR ARRIVAL IN THE NEW COUNTRY._
-
-
-On the second day of July 1883, in company with my wife, six children,
-a servant girl, and a full-rigged sailing ship--captain, mates, doctor,
-and crew included--I, the writer of this narrative, arrived at the port
-of Auckland.
-
-Our voyage had occupied one hundred and six days, and every one
-concerned was mightily sick of it.
-
-Myself and family and the doctor were the only occupants of the
-saloon, and as the latter had been ill for a considerable portion of
-the voyage, and the captain and myself were at loggerheads, things
-had not been quite so cheerful as they might have been. We had had
-more than our fair share of bad weather too: seven weeks of continuous
-gales, during which the ship had been more or less under water--or,
-as the mate put it, "had only come up to blow" occasionally--and
-our provisions had near run out, so it will readily be believed the
-prospect of once more treading dry land was hailed with delight by all.
-
-I am a civil engineer by profession, and having for some time found
-it very difficult to obtain employment in the old country, rejoiced
-in the prospect of getting work in New Zealand in connection with a
-land company, who were the owners of a large tract of land--500,000
-acres--situated as nearly as possible in the centre of the north
-island. This company had a board of directors in London, from one
-of whom--a friend of an uncle of mine--I had a very kind letter of
-introduction to the company's manager in New Zealand. My intention was
-to buy a few of the company's acres and build a house at the place
-where they were laying out a large town. Being the first in the field,
-and having such a good letter of introduction, as well as very fair
-testimonials, I felt confident of success.
-
-However, to return to our ship. As soon as she anchored off the
-floating magazine to discharge her gunpowder, before coming alongside
-the wharf, I looked about for a means of getting ashore, and was lucky
-enough to have a passage offered me in the steam launch which had
-brought the health officer on board.
-
-My mind was too bent on discovering house-room for my family, to think
-much of anything else, though I must confess I was not impressed with
-my first view of Auckland. I walked up the main street and opened
-negotiations with some of the principal hotels, but these proving too
-expensive for my pocket, I wandered about hoping to come across a house
-with the familiar card "Apartments to let" displayed in the window.
-After a considerable wear of boot leather and temper without any
-satisfactory result, I entered a small hotel (by the way, every beer
-shop in New Zealand is an hotel) and besought information combined with
-a glass of ale and a biscuit.
-
-Having ascertained the whereabouts of what I was assured was a _most_
-respectable boarding-house, I set out for the place, and presently
-found myself opposite to a wooden structure in H---- Street, which
-seemed to my unaccustomed eyes to be a cross between an undersized barn
-and a gipsy's caravan.
-
-With hesitating hand I lifted the knocker, and my feeble rat-tap
-was after a considerable lapse of time responded to by a female of
-doubtful age, and still more doubtful appearance. To this lady--they
-are all ladies in New Zealand--I told my wants, and was graciously
-informed that she would undertake to accommodate my whole family for
-six pounds per week,--which, by the way, was about one half the sum
-demanded by the most moderate of the hotels. With a feeling of relief
-at the prospect of getting suitable quarters at last, in reply to her
-invitation I entered the house.
-
-"This is where they has their meals," said my guide, with evident
-pride, as she opened a door on her left and disclosed a room looking
-for all the world like a skittle alley of unusually wide dimensions,
-with a long table down the middle of it. Not a vestige of carpet was
-there on the floor, which was far from clean, and sloped towards one
-corner. On both sides of the table were ranged a number of kitchen
-chairs, and these, with a sideboard bearing a strong resemblance to a
-varnished packing-case on end, completed the furniture.
-
-In a voice feeble with emotion, I requested to be shown the sleeping
-apartments, and was conducted to the back yard, down each side of which
-stood a long weather-boarded shed with six partitions in it; each
-divided portion being supplied with a window and a door, and forming
-a bedroom a little larger than a bathing-machine--which it internally
-greatly resembled. Three of these were placed at my disposal, and I
-hurried away in a cold perspiration, caused probably by the reflection,
-"Whatever will the wife say?"
-
-It was getting late, and I was getting tired. "Shall I have another
-hunt," I debated, and sacrifice the pound the wily proprietress of the
-caravan and bathing-machine had insisted on my leaving as a deposit.
-
-I knew we could not remain in the ship, as the stewards were
-discharged, and there was no one to attend to us. With a sigh I
-determined to stick to my bargain, and hurrying down to the wharf
-in Queen Street, secured the services of a waterman, and was soon
-alongside our erst-while floating home. On reaching the deck, my wife
-immediately accosted me as follows:--
-
-"Have you succeeded in getting rooms? The children have been _so_
-troublesome. They are longing to get on shore, and neither Mary Ann nor
-I can keep them quiet!"
-
-I assured her that after an immense expenditure of leg power I had
-succeeded in arranging about quarters, and added--as a vision of
-the skittle alley and the bathing-machines flitted before me--that I
-doubted whether she would find them very comfortable.
-
-"Oh! never fear, dear," she cheerfully rejoined. "After three months
-on board ship one ceases to be particular! All I long for is a bedroom
-with plenty of room to turn in."
-
-Again a vision of the bathing-boxes arose, and I trembled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-_AN AUCKLAND TABLE D'HÔTE._
-
-
-The afternoon was closing in, so collecting the luggage required for
-immediate use, and locking the rest of our come-at-able belongings
-in our cabins, we made haste to get on board the same boat that had
-brought me out. My spirits had slightly revived, as it had occurred to
-me that very probably the caravan and its appurtenances would show to
-better advantage by gaslight.
-
-Queen Street Wharf was soon reached, and having settled the waterman's
-claim, I hailed a cab, into which we all bundled, and in a short
-time found ourselves at our destination. Summoning the landlady, and
-requesting her to show my wife the sleeping apartments, I stayed behind
-to see to the luggage, and--I don't mind confessing--to allow her time
-to get over the first shock.
-
-Entering our bedroom a little later with the portmanteaus, I was
-greatly pleased and surprised to find my wife apparently reconciled
-to the surroundings, her only remark on the subject being that it was
-a queer-looking place, and not much bigger than our cabin. She was
-greatly puzzled as to whether she ought to change her dress for an
-evening one before appearing in the public room, but I emphatically
-assured her--having the skittle alley in my eye--that it was quite
-unnecessary, and we remained chatting until a tinkling bell announced
-that tea was served.
-
-A strange scene awaited us on entering the eating shed. Some twelve or
-fourteen men--I beg pardon, gentlemen--and five ladies were seated on
-as many rough-looking kitchen chairs, busily engaged in attacking the
-comestibles placed before them.
-
-A few--a very decided few--contented themselves with making the fork
-the medium of communication between their food and their mouths, but
-the greater majority used for this purpose both knives and forks with
-equal skill and success.
-
-At our entrance they paused momentarily from their labour of love, and
-favoured us with grins which seemed to say, "What confounded idiots
-you are to come here." One lady of angular aspect, and with hair of the
-corkscrew type of architecture, smiled affably, however, and, reassured
-by her complacency, we seated ourselves at her end of the table.
-
-The gentlemen, who, with three exceptions, sat in their shirt sleeves,
-were too deeply engrossed in the work before them to converse, and the
-clatter of knives and forks was for some time the only sound heard.
-We sat gazing at the scene, until a husky voice from behind demanded
-"Chops or 'am and eggs!" and recalled to our minds the object of our
-visit. Having decided in favour of chops, some black cindery looking
-bits of meat and bone were placed before us--resembling the delicious
-grilled chops of the London chop-house about as nearly as a bushman's
-stew resembles a _vol-au-vent â la financière_.
-
-I managed to stay the pangs of hunger with the assistance of some
-hunches of stale bread, plates of which were ranged at intervals down
-the centre of the table. My poor wife, however, could scarcely eat
-anything. As soon as we decently could, for the coatless gentry were
-still at work, we retired to our rooms, both wife and self depressed in
-spirits, Mary Ann sulky, and the children in a state of subdued mutiny.
-
-"We will get out of this wretched hole to-morrow, so cheer up, dear,"
-I exclaimed to my wife after a prolonged silence. "It's past seven
-o'clock now, and if you don't want me, I'll take a stroll down the
-town, and get something for supper."
-
-Off I went, and soon reached Queen Street, the principal thoroughfare
-of the town, which, to my great surprise, I found in semi-darkness, the
-only places lighted up being the hotels and tobacconists' shops.
-
-"No chance of getting anything for supper here," I thought, as I turned
-up a street which I concluded must lead back to H---- Street. I had not
-proceeded more than three hundred yards when I espied to my great joy
-a small shop with a blaze of light in the window, above which shone
-forth the legend "Oyster Saloon." With quickened step I approached,
-and peering in, beheld a remarkably neatly dressed and pretty young
-lady standing behind a little counter, and apparently fully occupied
-in doing nothing. On the counter stood some pickle bottles filled with
-extremely unpleasing-looking objects resembling large white slugs,
-while a heap of oysters with curiously corrugated shells were piled in
-one corner.
-
-Entering the establishment, I requested in polite terms to be informed
-the price of oysters.
-
-"A bob a bottle!" replied the ministering angel behind the counter.
-
-"A bob a bottle!" I repeated. "May I ask if that's colonial for a
-shilling a dozen?"
-
-"Oh! I see you're a new chum!" responded the young lady, in tones of
-mild contempt. "Well, oysters ain't sold here by the dozen; they are
-sold by the bottle! There are about four or five dozen, I reckon,
-in one of these!" indicating the bottles on the counter, with their
-revolting-looking contents.
-
-"But are those really good to eat?" I stammered.
-
-"Try them!" she replied, spooning from a bottle about a dozen on to a
-plate, and pushing it, together with a fork and a pepper-box, before me.
-
-Screwing up my courage, I got one into my mouth, another quickly
-followed, and in a remarkably short space of time the plate was emptied.
-
-"Capital! By Jove! I could not have believed they would be so good!" I
-exclaimed. "They don't, you must confess, look very tempting in those
-bottles?"
-
-"Well, perhaps not," said the fair one; "but, you see, these oysters
-grow firm on the rocks, and they are easy to open when fixed there by
-tapping the back of the upper shell with a hammer, but are terrors to
-tackle when loose like those," pointing to the heap in the corner.
-"Besides," she continued, holding up a bottle, "they are so much more
-convenient like this. Why, you would want a hand-barrow to carry five
-dozen of them in their shells!"
-
-"But how do you keep them fresh?" I demanded.
-
-"Oh!" said my entertainer, "boys pick them fresh for us every day, and
-what are not sold are thrown away!"
-
-Oh! ye epicures of London, with Whitstables at three and nine per
-dozen, and Colchesters at two and six, think on this--oysters pitched
-away daily, probably in hundreds, possibly in thousands! Grind your
-teeth with envy; but take my advice, stay where you are. You are not
-the sort for the colony, and living _isn't all oysters_.
-
-However, to resume. The oysters were so good that I asked for more, and
-invited the young damsel to join me; but she declined, and asked, in
-the course of conversation, what hotel I was staying at.
-
-I explained that, having a long family and a short purse, hotels were
-too expensive, and that we had that afternoon taken possession of a
-portion of a boarding-house in H---- Street, which said portion we had
-fully determined upon restoring to its owners on the morrow.
-
-"Why not take apartments?" she rejoined.
-
-"Apartments!" I almost yelled. "Why, I have been prowling about for the
-best part of the day trying my utmost to find some, but could not see a
-single house with a card in the window!"
-
-"The idea! as if any lady would put a low card in her window," she
-sneered. "But if you want apartments, my ma has some to let, and I'll
-take you there, and introduce you, if you like."
-
-With much joy I acquiesced in the proposal, and having settled my
-account, and procured a bottle of oysters for home consumption, we
-proceeded to the maternal residence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-_A CHAT ABOUT AUCKLAND._
-
-
-The interview with the maternal parent proved thoroughly satisfactory,
-as did the maternal parent herself,--an elderly lady, neatly dressed in
-black, with silver grey hair, and a face which, before old Father Time
-had placed his brand on it, must have been very pretty.
-
-I promised to bring my "better half" in the morning to complete
-arrangements, and hurried home with my oysters, which with some
-difficulty I succeeded in persuading her to taste. Having once overcome
-her repugnance to their appearance, she enjoyed a good supper of them,
-with some bread and butter that I persuaded our hostess to let us have.
-
-Supper over, I detailed my adventures of the evening, to my wife's
-great delight, and we shortly after retired to bed, but, alas! not to
-sleep. Before the drowsy god could exert his influence over us, an
-opposing agent stepped in, and we discovered to our horror that New
-Zealand numbered among her colonists certain nimble little creatures
-well known in the old country under the generic name of "Fleas;"
-the Maori name is "Mōrorohū," which, literally translated, means, I
-believe, "little stranger." They are supposed by some to represent the
-first importation of animal life that the English favoured Maoriland
-with.
-
-Since their too successful introduction, an Acclimatisation Society
-has been established, and under its auspices many animals and birds of
-different kinds have been acclimatised. Rabbits and sparrows are, I
-believe, numbered among its earliest ventures. Within the last year a
-large number of ferrets, stoats, and weasels have been introduced by
-the Government to destroy the rabbits, which have proved too many for
-the settlers in the south island; and probably before long we shall
-hear of snakes being brought out to kill the sparrows.
-
-What animal will be hit upon to destroy the stoats and weasels when
-their turn comes--and farmers in the localities where they have been
-set free already complain bitterly of them--I am at a loss to imagine,
-though I have no doubt the members of the Society, with the aid of a
-Natural History, will be able to solve the problem.
-
-The notion possesses me that if the Society continues to flourish we
-shall eventually become a sort of sea-girt Zoological Garden, and
-possibly be able to advertise tiger-hunting among the attractions of
-the New Zealand of the future.
-
-I trust my kind readers will pardon this digression, for which the
-"little strangers" and the sleeplessness accompanying their presence
-are responsible.
-
-In the morning we rose ourselves unrefreshed, though the unwilling
-refreshers of many. After breakfast, which resembled in every
-particular the meal of the previous evening, with the exception that
-stale flounders took the place of ham and eggs, a final interview with
-our landlady was held, and proved of not so stormy a character as I had
-anticipated: it was brought to a successful conclusion--at any rate on
-the landlady's part--by the handing over of another golden sovereign.
-Her strong point in argument was that we had agreed to stay for a week,
-and therefore must pay for a week. This logical conclusion I found it
-impossible to shake until I produced the sovereign, which acted like
-oil on troubled waters.
-
-All difficulties being thereby overcome, we made haste to depart, and
-a cab shortly after deposited us and our luggage at our new quarters,
-with which my wife was much pleased.
-
-The clauses in the agreement arrived at concerning them were as
-follows:--Entire and exclusive use of a sitting-room and three bedrooms
-furnished; attendance on us to devolve on Mary Ann; cooking to devolve
-on landlady; housekeeping to devolve on my wife; and lastly, but not
-least, the payments for the apartments--three guineas per week--to
-devolve on me.
-
-Prior to leaving home I had given instructions to have my letters
-addressed to the Northern Club, Auckland, care of ----, Esquire, for
-whom I carried a letter of introduction; but anxious though I was to
-get home news, I had had hitherto no possible opportunity of going to
-look after them. Now the family were fairly housed, however, I hastened
-to relieve my anxiety, and found a couple of English letters awaiting
-me at the Club, which satisfied me that all was well with those dear to
-us in the old country. A good many of my letters, I learnt, had been
-forwarded to Cambridge to Mr.----, who was staying there looking after
-the interests of the land company to which he was manager. I obtained
-his address, and sent him a wire stating our arrival, and requesting
-him to forward letters.
-
-Having settled that business, I hastened down to the wharf to see what
-progress our ship--which was now alongside the Tee--had made in the
-unloading of her cargo.
-
-I found the Tee heaped with cases already hoisted out of her capacious
-holds, though nothing of mine had as yet been disgorged. Having the
-keys of our cabins in my pocket, I decided to take out the things that
-were in them, and with the aid of a man and a hand truck they were
-safely conveyed to our rooms.
-
-My time was now my own, and I went for a stroll.
-
-Though not impressed with the appearance of Auckland itself, I thought
-the harbour and its natural surroundings remarkably pretty, yet lacking
-the grandeur of the Bay of Rio de Janeiro and other harbours I have
-seen. The formation of the land is curious, and gave me at first sight
-the idea of peaks which at one time had been bold, but which by some
-wonderful process had been either melted down into undulating mounds,
-or were in course of being melted down.
-
-The peak on the isle of Rangitoto, which shelters the mouth of the
-harbour, Mount Eden, and numerous others, come under the latter
-description, while the north head and north shore generally come under
-the former. It was the north head that particularly attracted my
-attention as we first entered the harbour; it is shaped like a huge
-inverted basin, and is covered with grass. I can assure my readers that
-after one hundred and six days at sea the sight of that grassy mound
-was good, very good, and will never be forgotten.
-
-The harbour called the Waitemata, opening on the east coast, is as a
-haven perfection; it is admirably sheltered, has sufficient capacity
-to hold half a dozen war squadrons, and is deep enough to allow the
-largest ship afloat to enter at dead low water and steam or sail right
-up to the Queen Street Wharf.
-
-On its southern shore stands Auckland and its suburbs, and on its
-northern the town or suburb of Devonport.
-
-Another harbour, the Manukau, opens on the west coast, and extends
-inland towards Auckland, leaving only a strip of land, in places not
-half a mile wide, between it and the waters of the Waitemata. It has
-unfortunately a bar, and is therefore not much used by vessels of
-large size. The construction of a canal joining the two harbours has
-been proposed, for what purpose is not clear, unless the projectors
-have some scheme for doing away with the Manukau bar, thus allowing
-ships to come straight through to Auckland from the west coast. It is
-not at all improbable, however, that the promoters desire to have the
-canal cut simply for _the fun of making the land north of Auckland
-an island_. Of course the money expended on the work will have to be
-borrowed, so what matters!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-_MORE ABOUT AUCKLAND._
-
-
-The principal street in the city of Auckland, as my reader has been
-already told, is Queen Street, terminating seawards in the Queen Street
-Wharf.
-
-It is not an imposing-looking thoroughfare. No indeed! and at the
-risk of catching it the next time I am down there, I repeat there is
-nothing imposing in it at all; neither the street, the houses, nor the
-tradesmen. There is little architectural beauty to be seen, and the
-shops have for the most part an unsubstantial appearance, particularly
-noticeable in the upper portion of the street. The lower, or wharf end,
-possesses some substantial-looking buildings of brick and stone, the
-most notable in 1883 being the post-office, the New Zealand Insurance
-Company's building, and the Bank of New Zealand.
-
-The pavement on the left hand side for a considerable distance is
-sheltered by verandahs built from the upper part of the shop fronts,
-and extending as far as the roadway, where they are supported by
-cast-iron pillars. They form an agreeable protection from the sun, or
-from sudden showers of rain, and are remarkable as evincing an effort
-to study the public comfort--an effort very seldom made in New Zealand.
-
-Since I landed in 1883 the town has undergone great improvements. A
-good-sized railway terminus now stands at the foot of Queen Street.
-Tramways run in all directions. A great many brick buildings, some five
-stories high, have been run up. The Auckland Freezing Company have
-erected very extensive premises of brick on ground reclaimed from the
-bay. An art gallery and public library, contained in a really handsome
-building, has been opened. _The Star_ newspaper proprietor has built
-large new offices; and an arcade with shops almost rivalling in style
-and finish those of its elder brother in London--the Burlington--has
-lately been completed. On the north shore a magnificent graving dock is
-in course of construction, which will be able, when finished, to take
-in the largest ships afloat but two, viz., _The Great Eastern_ and _The
-City of Rome_.
-
-With the exception, perhaps, that the majority of the houses are of
-timber, Auckland may be said to resemble the ordinary run of colonial
-cities: it has an unusually fair share of churches and chapels of
-all denominations, and a still fairer share of public-houses--I ask
-pardon--hotels.
-
-Of places of public amusement, with the exception of a dingy little
-theatre very seldom used, and a so-called opera-house where occasional
-performances take place, it has virtually none, and to this fact is
-undoubtedly to be ascribed the large amount of drunkenness that exists.
-
-The vast number of places where drink can be obtained show what a brisk
-liquor trade is done; but if half these places were abolished, it would
-not, I believe, lessen the drunkenness by a single man. Gumdiggers,
-farmers, bushmen, fishermen, and all sorts and conditions of men
-frequent Auckland town when flush of money, and they _will_ have some
-amusement! There are no music-halls, concert-rooms, or other places
-where they can go and smoke their pipes and enjoy themselves, therefore
-they fall back on the hotels.
-
-It may be wrong and wicked, but it's human nature. As Dickens' immortal
-Squeers says, "Natur's a rum un;" and all the head shakings and
-turning up of the eyes on the part of the pious won't alter the fact.
-
-I was wrong, however, to say there are no places of amusement except
-the theatre and opera-house. There is one. It is called the "Sailor's
-Rest." Suppose (to use a colonialism) we put in an hour or two there.
-
-After ascending a steep break-neck sort of stair-ladder erected in the
-back part of a shop, we stand in a large room hung about with flags. At
-one end is a stage, and scattered about are small tables, seated round
-which we see marines and blue-jackets from Her Majesty's ship lying in
-the harbour, fishermen, shop assistants, and working men of all sorts.
-They are chatting and playing at dominoes, draughts, and other games.
-Presently "order" is called from the stage, a lady takes her seat at
-the piano, which occupies one corner, and a gentleman comes forward,
-makes his bow, and sings a very good song to her accompaniment.
-
-Another song follows, then a duet, inspired by which a marine and a
-blue-jacket volunteer a second duet, ascend the stage, and sing it
-capitally; another sailor follows with a comic song, a gumdigger gives
-a recitation, and so the evening wears away. The room is crammed, and
-in the back part near the stairs smoking is allowed, so the smoker is
-not deprived of half his evening's enjoyment.
-
-Ladies, _real_ Christian ladies--not "eye rollers" and "head
-shakers"--flit about ministering to the wants of their visitors. Coffee
-is served, and the proceedings close with a hymn, which I must confess
-sounds out of place after the comic songs, and I think would have been
-better omitted. By the time the audience have dispersed the hotels are
-closed.
-
-How those hotel-keepers must _abominate_ that flag-draped room up the
-back stairs! If there were a few more such places in Auckland it would
-mean _death to them_.
-
-While on the subject of Auckland, let me say a few words about the
-shops and the shop-keepers. First the shops. One very noticeable
-feature in the majority of them is the absence of taste in the display
-of their contents; there is nothing to attract the eye, and however
-good the articles may be in themselves, they are seldom shown to
-advantage, but are huddled together in the window anyhow.
-
-With regard to their attendants. In the larger shops you always find
-civility, but never any approach to servility: the shopman does not
-press you to purchase, but if you elect to do so, you may. It is a
-_quid pro quo_ transaction, with no obligation on either side. In the
-inferior shops you too often miss the civility, and the proprietor
-appears to consider he is conferring a favour by allowing you to buy.
-No attempt, at any rate, is ever made to push a trade.
-
-The same feeling which pervades the manly tradesman's breast appears
-also to influence the lodging-house and boarding-house owners. "_If
-you want any article you must come and ask if we've got it_," and "_if
-you want apartments you must find out our address--we are not going
-to bother_," are the sentiments which I fancy form the basis of the
-trading principles of the aristocratic tradesmen and lodging-house
-keepers of Auckland. The reader will perhaps recollect the trouble
-I had in trying to find rooms when we first arrived, and the awful
-place where I eventually deposited my family. Now that I am well
-acquainted with the town, I find there are plenty of nice apartments
-and boarding-houses, though it would be impossible for a stranger to
-discover them: if I were an Irishman, I'd say--he would require to be
-in Auckland a month before he arrived in order to do so.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-_MY FIRST RAILWAY JOURNEY._
-
-
-I omitted in the last chapter to state that Auckland possesses a
-hospital (perfect for its size), and some grand butchers' shops.
-
-The hospital I have been all over, thanks to the courtesy of the
-resident physician, and I do not believe that for brightness,
-ventilation, and all other essentials, its wards are to be surpassed by
-those of any hospital in London. I trust my readers will not imagine by
-my speaking of the butchers' shops and the hospital in the same breath
-that I desire to indicate that these institutions have anything in
-common or are sympathetic.
-
-With this explanation I will proceed to the butchers' shops. Meat
-is the principal feather in New Zealand's cap: it is the one really
-substantial cheap necessary of life, and New Zealanders have not
-forgotten to make the most of it. It is the bait that has been found
-most attractive in the immigrant fishery, and by the use of which the
-agent-general has landed the majority of the immigrants in this colony.
-The shops where it is sold are quite a feature in the town, and must
-on no account be neglected. They are very large--larger, I think, than
-any in London, with the exception perhaps of one belonging to Messrs.
-Spiers & Pond near Blackfriars Bridge. They are also very bright and
-clean looking, being lined throughout, ceiling and all, with white
-glazed tiles. On horizontal bars of bright steel suspended from the
-ceiling are hung the carcasses of sheep and bullocks in vast numbers,
-while legs and shoulders of mutton, sirloins of beef and other joints
-are disposed on tables projecting from the walls. They are without
-doubt the most killing-looking shops in Auckland.
-
-The auction marts form another prominent feature in the town, and of
-these I will have something to say by-and-by; for the present I think I
-had better return to my own affairs.
-
-The letters which had taken a trip to Cambridge (Waikato) had now
-returned, in company with one from Mr.----, who informed me he would be
-in town in a day or two, and would call. We therefore had nothing to do
-till then but amuse ourselves.
-
-A trip to Remuera, the prettiest suburb of Auckland, in an
-uncomfortable omnibus, occupied one day. On the next, as my wife wished
-to do shopping, I decided to find out what shooting was to be obtained
-in the neighbourhood, and in furtherance of that object entered the
-shop of one of the two gunsmiths in Queen Street and accosted its
-proprietor, from whom I learned that there was some grand curlew
-shooting to be had at Onehunga, a place about eight miles off, on the
-Manukau Harbour. I immediately determined to go there, and see if I
-could not make a bag. As I found Onehunga was to be reached by rail as
-well as omnibus, I decided to try the former, with a view principally
-to the saving of time; so taking my gun, cartridge belt, and game bag,
-I made, in colonial parlance, "tracks" for the station, and took ticket
-for Onehunga and back, the high charge made--half-a-crown--astonishing
-me considerably. I was fortunate in just catching a train, but not so
-lucky in my choice of compartments, for I discovered, after the train
-had given its preliminary jerk--a mode of progression peculiar to New
-Zealand railway trains--that the gentleman by my side was suffering
-from an injudicious application of alcohol.
-
-The seats in New Zealand railway carriages run "fore and aft"--that
-is, lengthways--and when the first jerk came the afflicted gentleman
-toppled over against me, and I had some trouble in getting him fixed up
-perpendicularly again; the next jerk, however, found me prepared, and I
-met him half way, with a force that sent him over against his neighbour
-on the other side. This evidently did not meet with approbation, for
-he was shot back to me promptly, and we kept him going between us like
-an inverted pendulum. The "overcharged" individual operated upon took
-it perfectly quietly, evidently considering his oscillations quite
-the correct thing when travelling on a New Zealand railway. Playing
-battledore and shuttlecock with a drunken man is tiring work, however,
-and I was glad to change my seat at the first station we stopped at.
-
-After three quarters of an hour of the roughest railway travelling I
-had ever experienced--progress being attained by a series of violent
-jerks--Onehunga was reached, and I descended and strolled away from the
-station, fully convinced that the railway authorities charged by time,
-not mileage; and this conviction I have since seen no reason to alter.
-
-Onehunga is not an interesting port, and I have no intention of
-describing it; suffice it to say that it is decidedly straggling.
-Going into an hotel near the station, I procured some lunch, and was
-directed to the most likely place for curlew. I laid up for them in
-some all swamp grass, and waited patiently, but never saw a curlew all
-the afternoon, and what is more, have never seen one since I have been
-in New Zealand. I am positive there is not such a bird to be found in
-the colony, or, at any rate, in the province of Auckland; what are
-called curlew here are really godwit--the feathering of the two birds
-is almost identical, and both have long beaks, but the curlew's curve
-downwards and the godwit's upwards. The latter is a splendid bird for
-the table, while the curlew is scarcely worth the picking. I have shot
-dozens of them in the old country, and hundreds of godwits out here, so
-I ought to know.
-
-I would not have wearied the reader with the above remarks had I not so
-often read in books, and more than once in newspapers out here, of the
-curlew in New Zealand.
-
-When I reached the railway station, homeward bound, I had a long time
-to wait for a train, and walking up and down the dreary platform,
-I did not, no! I greatly fear I did not, bless that Queen Street
-gunsmith. The train arriving at last, I was jerked back to Auckland in
-an unenviable frame of mind.
-
-The bag I made that day at Onehunga consisted of one king-fisher, which
-I looked on at the time as a great curiosity. I am wiser now, for they
-are the commonest bird we have in this part of the colony--commoner
-even than sparrows; but that Onehunga king-fisher I skinned and got
-stuffed, and that Onehunga king-fisher I still value highly. He is the
-first bird I ever shot in New Zealand, and he is the last bird I ever
-intend shooting at Onehunga.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-_LIVING IN NEW ZEALAND._
-
-
-Sunday had now arrived--our first Sunday in Auckland. It is kept, as in
-England, as a day of rest, except by those unhappy individuals who are
-unfortunate enough to reside near a Salvation Army barracks! There is
-no rest or peace for them.
-
-Early in the morning we heard the distant sound of martial music, and
-imagined that some volunteer corps was going to hold church parade; but
-as the sounds came nearer we were undeceived--no volunteer corps that
-ever existed would consent to march behind such ear-torturing noises.
-I hurried out and found that the disturbing sounds proceeded from the
-Salvation Army band. I am told that these Salvationists do a good deal
-of good: if they really help people to heaven with the awful apology
-for a band they at present possess, surely they would do a vast deal
-more good if they had better instruments and more practised bandsmen.
-The big drum, cornet, trombone, flute, and other instruments take a
-leading position in their ceremonial, and should therefore be put on
-a thoroughly efficient footing. If this were done, many persons who
-now rush away holding their ears when the Salvation Army band is heard
-approaching would stay, if only to listen to the music.
-
-We attended service at St. Paul's Church, and had scarcely returned
-when Mr. ---- called. We found him very gentlemanly and agreeable. He
-dined with us, spent the afternoon, and gave us a good deal of valuable
-advice. He said the roads were far too bad for my wife to think of
-going up country yet, and recommended my securing a house in Auckland
-for three or four months, and after seeing my family settled, that I
-myself should take a trip to the new township in order to see what I
-thought of it, and then make my final arrangements.
-
-This advice appeared so sound that I determined to follow it
-implicitly. On Monday morning, therefore, I started out on a house
-hunt, and with little trouble succeeded in finding a suitable verandah
-cottage in the suburb of Parnell. My goods by this time were landed
-and stored in a warehouse near the wharf, so before our week was up at
-the lodgings I had them removed to our new home, in which we were soon
-comfortably installed.
-
-Parnell is undoubtedly the aristocratic suburb of Auckland. It is
-as pretty as aristocratic, and I trust we sufficiently appreciated
-the honour of being the temporary possessors of a cottage within its
-precincts.
-
-Several retired naval and military officers, and gentlemen from other
-of the recognised professions with small private incomes, reside there
-with their families, and form a society, agreeable, enjoyable, and
-exclusive. There is not the least doubt that New Zealand is a grand
-country for English people with certain tastes and private incomes of,
-say five or six hundred a year. I don't refer to those who are fond of
-theatre-going and such like vanities, or those who place cookery among
-the fine arts, for, as I have already hinted, New Zealand is no place
-for them. The persons I mean are the lovers of outdoor amusements,
-such as riding, sailing, fishing, and shooting, and those who like
-their rubber of whist, their chat and game of billiards at the Club,
-and their social, unceremonious evenings with their friends. The happy
-possessor of an income such as I have indicated could own a house in
-town and a place also in the country, where he might with his family
-pass the summer months; his country property need cost him nothing
-to keep up, for he would have no difficulty in finding a respectable
-working-man tenant, who, if allowed to live rent free and work the
-land, would not only look after the place and keep fences, &c., in
-repair, but would willingly keep his (the owner of the property's)
-horses in horse feed all the year.
-
-If he selected the north Kaipara district, his property would be
-bordered by the inland sea, and he could keep his five-ton cutter
-sailing-boat, and enjoy the most delightful water excursions up the
-numberless beautiful creeks. A two-roomed shanty, costing about £30,
-would be ample accommodation for the working-man tenant.
-
-But I can imagine my reader exclaiming, "Living must be much cheaper
-than in England to enable people with moderate competencies to thus
-have within their reach almost all the enjoyments which fall to the lot
-of rich county families?"
-
-It is not so, however: the necessities of life, with a few exceptions,
-are on the contrary dearer in New Zealand than at home, but the
-out-of-door pleasures of life are _infinitely cheaper_. Small
-properties of twenty or thirty acres planted, fenced, and laid out in
-paddocks, orchards, &c., with a good six or seven roomed house, and
-outbuildings, can be bought for four or five hundred pounds; decent
-hacks to ride at from seven to ten pounds a piece; and a good second
-hand five-ton sailing-boat for between twenty and thirty pounds.
-
-Children can be fairly well educated in the private schools of Auckland
-at far less cost than they can be in England.
-
-In New Zealand it is not necessary to keep up the same style as in the
-old country--a man is not supposed to keep a wine cellar: he eschews
-top hats, kid gloves, &c.: his dress suit is more likely to deteriorate
-by moths than by wear: he lives plainly, and dresses so: his clothes
-which are too shabby for town he can wear out in the country--no one
-will think him one whit less a gentleman if he appears in trousers
-patched at the knees. Set dinner parties are not fashionable, though
-pot luck invitations are. To gentlemen and ladies who cannot enjoy
-their meal unless it is served _à la Russe_, I say--Stay where you
-are!--but to those who can enjoy a good plain dinner plainly put on
-the table, and are contented to drink with it a glass of ale or a
-cup of tea, the usual colonial beverage, and who are fond of outdoor
-amusements, I emphatically cry--Come! this is the country for you. You
-can have your own and country house--your horses and your sailing-boat,
-your fishing and shooting--and can save money. Ay! and invest it
-profitably too, if you keep your eyes open.
-
-I trust the kind reader will excuse the foregoing outburst, and accept
-my assurance that I am not a tout for a land company. I am anything but
-in love with land companies now. But to resume.
-
-My family being now in comfortable quarters, I started on my journey to
-"the town that was to be," in which all my hopes were centred.
-
-The railway jerked me as far as the village of Hamilton, some
-eighty-six miles from Auckland, in a little over five hours and
-three-quarters, I having travelled _by the fast train_. From thence I
-was conveyed to Cambridge by coach, and was soon settled _pro tem_ in a
-comfortable hotel. I had still thirty odd miles to travel, and had been
-puzzling my head all day long how to manage it, as I feared I should
-never find my way riding by myself; but here luck befriended me, for
-to my great delight I found a party of surveyors, four in number,
-staying at the hotel _en route_ for the very place. I speedily made
-their acquaintance, and was informed they had hired for the journey a
-four-wheeled trap, called a buggy, and would be very glad to have me
-for a travelling companion, as they had a spare seat. I need scarcely
-say I joyfully accepted their kind offer, and we were soon on the most
-friendly terms.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-_A PERILOUS JOURNEY._
-
-
-The news that greeted my ears the following morning on entering the
-breakfast room was that the all important buggy had arrived, and that
-we were to start as soon as possible in order to accomplish the journey
-by daylight. I made a hasty meal therefore, and was soon out inspecting
-the vehicle, in which, for the next seven or eight hours, we were to
-have so close an interest. It was a curious-looking affair, very like
-an overgrown goat chaise, with a sort of roof or covering supported on
-iron rods, and containing two seats, each capable of accommodating with
-moderate comfort three persons, while there was room for another beside
-the driver. To this arrangement on wheels two strong rough-looking
-horses were attached, and standing by their heads was the driver, a
-stout man with a short neck, a weather-beaten face, and a red nose of
-goodly proportions.
-
-There was a good deal of luggage to stow away, consisting of
-portmanteaus, theodolites, chains, tents, &c., but at last everything
-was ready, and we started.
-
-For the first three or four miles all went well, except the dust
-which went down our throats and up our noses, till we could scarcely
-breathe. This was not likely to last long, however, for black clouds
-had been rolling up since early morning, and hanging in the sky like
-regiments taking position on a parade ground before a review. A
-break up of the weather was evidently imminent, and we thought with
-satisfaction of our roof, and bade defiance to the elements. Soon
-the aspect of the country, which had hitherto been flat, began to
-change, and the character of the road began to change with it, the
-former becoming undulating and the latter uneven. As we advanced the
-country became more broken, and the road problematical, and at last
-we found ourselves travelling along a sideling cut in the face of a
-range of high precipitous hills, in the valley at the foot of which
-the river Waikato was rushing, roaring, and tumbling in its rocky
-bed. The road, if it could be dignified with the name, was scarcely
-twelve feet wide, and sloped in places considerably towards the outer
-edge, while two hundred feet below us rushed the river. In some places
-landslips had occurred, and it was barely wide enough for the wheels
-of our conveyance; and, to make matters worse, the threatened rain had
-commenced to fall in torrents, rendering the clayey soil as slippery as
-possible.
-
-To say that the whole of the occupants of that buggy were not terribly
-nervous, would be to state a deliberate untruth. We all pretended to be
-quite at our ease, and I even tried to smoke a pipe, but our assumed
-composure was an utter fraud--indeed it was quite sufficient to see how
-we with one accord leant towards the hill, whenever the buggy wheel
-approached more nearly to the outer edge of the road, to be able to
-state positively that we were in a highly nervous condition. Old Jack,
-the driver, appeared to take things coolly enough; but he certainly had
-the best of it, for had the trap capsized he could have thrown himself
-off, while we, boxed up like sardines, must have gone over with it. He
-kept the horses going at a trot, wherever he could, and as they slid
-and stumbled onward, the blood-curdling thought would creep through my
-mind, that if one fell and slipped over the edge, he must drag us down
-with him. It was like a fearful nightmare, and the only reassuring
-feature--or features--in it was old Jack's imperturbable countenance,
-as he sucked at his short clay and "klucked" at his horses.
-
-At last the agony was over; we were again on level ground; that awful
-rushing, roaring torrent had left us, and we breathed more freely.
-Old Jack now called a halt near a little brook to bait and water his
-horses, and we availed ourselves of the opportunity to dispose of the
-lunch--brought with us from the hotel--and began to converse again, a
-thing we had not thought of attempting to do for the last two hours or
-more.
-
-I inquired of Jack whether accidents often occurred on the part of the
-road we had lately left, and he replied that he only knew of one waggon
-going over the edge--the two horses were killed and the waggon dashed
-to pieces, but the driver, by throwing himself off, escaped with a
-broken arm. He, however, believed there had been another bit of a smash
-or two, but did not know particulars.
-
-Pushing forward again, we came to some extremely broken country, and
-old Jack's method of doing this portion, though it evinced a certain
-amount of knowledge of the laws of mechanics, was simply agonising.
-Whenever we came to a steep incline with a corresponding rise, he
-would whip up the horses in order to try and obtain sufficient impetus
-to take us up the other side, and down the incline we would go at a
-fearful pace, jolting, bumping, and hanging on like grim death. How
-the springs stood it is a marvel to me. We very nearly came to grief
-once, for the wheels on one side of our conveyance suddenly sunk in a
-soft bog, and it almost overturned. With our united efforts, however,
-we succeeded in extricating the machine, and resumed our journey, which
-at last came to an end, as we pulled up considerably after dark before
-the door of a little hotel--almost the only building to be seen in this
-future Chicago. Although our arrival appeared to be quite unexpected,
-the landlord and his wife seemed perfectly equal to the occasion. The
-buggy was expeditiously emptied of its contents, and bedrooms were
-promptly shown us. While we were engaged in removing the signs of the
-late fearful expedition, the sounds of frizzling and spluttering,
-and the delightful odours that reached our olfactory nerves from the
-culinary department, conveyed to our minds the satisfactory assurance
-that provision for our exhausted frames of no mean order was under way,
-and served to confirm my opinion that our host and hostess were _quite_
-equal to the occasion.
-
-A hearty meal, followed by a pleasant chat, in a snug little
-sitting-room, with a bright coal fire burning in the grate, formed
-a most delightful close to what had been, to say the least of it,
-anything but a pleasant day's travelling.
-
-I was up betimes in the morning, and was woefully disappointed with the
-look of the country. Stretching in all directions was a vast undulating
-plain covered with stunted brown fern--not a blade of grass, not a
-green tree nor shrub was to be seen--nothing but brown fern. The hotel,
-the manager's house, a wooden shanty, some surveyors' tents, and a
-small hut alone broke the monotony of the view. In the extreme distance
-could be discerned ranges of high hills, but whether covered with trees
-or vegetation of any kind they were too far off to determine. Nothing
-seemed to be stirring either; no busy workmen were there laying out the
-streets of the future city or erecting houses for the future citizens;
-no sign of anything going on. Nothing but brown fern. I had evidently
-arrived a quarter of a century too soon.
-
-I will not say anything of the quality of the land. It may have been
-first rate--in fact, I am inclined to think it must have been--for on
-inquiry I found the company demanded eight pounds per acre for suburban
-allotments two miles from the centre of the township.
-
-[Illustration: Nothing but brown fern.]
-
-To build the smallest house before a railway was made would cost seven
-hundred and fifty pounds, timber being twenty-five shillings per
-hundred feet. There was no wood for firing, and coals were eight pounds
-per ton. It was evidently no place for me, and the only thing left to
-determine was how to get back again. The landlord of the hotel, whom
-I consulted, told me that a waggon with stores and coal was expected
-in a day or two, and thought I would have no difficulty in arranging
-with the driver to go back in it. "To wait for the waggon," as the old
-refrain recommends, was therefore evidently the best way out of the
-difficulty, and I determined to do so. I called on the manager, and
-told him it would be impossible for me to settle there at present. He
-fully agreed with me, and advised my renting a small house in Cambridge
-until matters had become more advanced, when he promised to do all he
-could. He feared, however, it might be some time before he could be of
-any use to me, and I must say I feared so too. However, I thought it
-would be better to follow his advice, and determined on another house
-hunt when I reached Cambridge. I spent the rest of the day with him,
-and in the evening strolled back to the hotel, which was about three
-quarters of a mile off, being solely guided to it by its light, as
-there was no road or track of any kind.
-
-On my way I was startled by hearing the most hideous noises at some
-distance from me, but gradually growing nearer. They evidently
-proceeded from human throats: what could it mean? Louder and louder
-grew the fearful sounds, until at last I could make out a party of men
-on horseback, who, on their nearer approach, I found to be Maoris. They
-passed me without notice, still keeping up the horrible din, and I came
-to the conclusion that they must have been imbibing too freely at the
-hotel. On arriving there, I mentioned the matter to the landlord, and
-he told me that they were natives from the King country who had come
-over to buy some stores, and that they were making the noises I heard
-to drive away "the Taipo," a sort of devil who devotes his attention
-exclusively to Maoris, over whom, however, he only possesses power at
-night. The Maoris, I learnt, would never go out singly after dark, and
-when they ventured in company, gave utterance to the unearthly cries I
-have described to keep him away; and it strikes me that if "the Taipo"
-has anything like a correct ear, the method adopted ought to be most
-effectual.
-
-Two days passed, and on the afternoon of the third the waggon appeared.
-It had been detained on the road through a breakdown, and the driver
-had been obliged to spend a night in the open air, which, as the
-weather was now extremely cold, must have been anything but pleasant.
-He had succeeded in repairing damages in the morning, for, with a
-cautiousness begotten probably by previous catastrophes, he had with
-him the necessary tools, and was enabled to complete his journey.
-My proposal to accompany him on his return was favourably received,
-particularly as I agreed to pay a pound for the privilege, and on the
-following morning we started.
-
-After over nine hours of torture, mental and bodily, for the waggon
-was innocent of springs, Cambridge was reached; and I was once more
-installed in the comfortable hotel there.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-_THE "TERROR."_
-
-
-House hunting is not usually exciting sport, no matter how plentiful
-the game may be, and Cambridge I found very badly stocked. I travelled,
-I believe, over every inch of the scattered town, which has a
-population of about sixteen hundred, saw some places for sale, the
-prices asked being far beyond my purse, and inquired in almost every
-shop for houses to let, but without success.
-
-I had almost given up in despair, when I struck what I thought was a
-good scent, which landed me in a shoemaker's shop, where I found the
-proprietor, a mild-looking, bald-headed little man, spectacled, and
-leather aproned, hammering away at a boot.
-
-"I believe you have a small house to let?" I commenced.
-
-"Well, I has and I hasn't!" the old man responded. "You see, I has a
-place, but it's got a tenant, and she's a queer 'un to deal with!"
-
-"Well, you can't let your house twice over," I interrupted rather
-shortly, thinking the old fellow was making fun of me; "so there is an
-end to the matter!"
-
-"Hold on a bit!" returned the patriarch. "I've given this here widder
-notice to quit, for I can't get no rent out of her, but lor! she don't
-care no more for notices than nothing at all!"
-
-"But has she a lease?" I demanded.
-
-"Lease indeed!" quoth the ancient one indignantly. "Cock _her_ up with
-a lease! Why, she's only a weekly tenant, but, my word, she's a terror!"
-
-"If she won't pay, there should be no difficulty in getting rid of
-her," I remarked.
-
-"May be not! may be not!" he answered slowly, and in unconvinced tones;
-"but you don't know her. She's a terror! my word! she _is_ a terror!
-But I tell you what," he continued, brightening up; "you go and say you
-heard she was going away, and you would like to see the place. I'll
-show you the way."
-
-"Don't you think it would be better for you to see her yourself and
-arrange matters?" I queried.
-
-"Me see her!--me arrange matters with her!" he screamed; "catch me at
-it. Me and the widder don't hit it at all, and she's a regler terror,
-she is. But you're all right though; she will be civil enough to you."
-
-"Very well then," I reluctantly consented; and off we set for the abode
-of the formidable widow, and soon arrived before a little cottage with
-a piece of waste ground in front, shut off from the road by a hedge and
-a gate.
-
-The shoemaker concealed himself behind the hedge, while I entered
-the gate and knocked at the cottage door, which was opened almost
-instantaneously by a tall, hard-featured, middle-aged female in a
-widow's cap. The door opened direct into the sitting-room, without the
-intervention of a hall or passage, and I was undoubtedly face to face
-with "the terror" herself. Fully sensible of my position, I raised my
-hat, and addressed her as follows:--
-
-"I must ask pardon for my intrusion, but hearing that you were about to
-change your residence, I"----
-
-"Change my ressidence! And may I make so bold as to hask who informed
-you I was going to change my res-si-dence?" she interrupted, tossing
-her head, and scornfully eyeing me.
-
-"I understood so from your landlord this morning," I meekly responded.
-
-"Oh! you did, did yer! Well, you can tell that bald-headed, goggling,
-mean little humbug of a cobbler that he's labouring under a
-miscomprehension!" With that the awful female banged the door in my
-face, and thus brought to an end my house-hunting in Cambridge. No sign
-of the cobbler could I see--he had evidently overheard "the terror's"
-concluding words and bolted.
-
-I went back to my hotel dejected and out of spirits. On entering the
-reading-room, I found two gentlemen installed there--evidently new
-arrivals--who were smoking cigarettes and perusing newspapers. The
-younger one, a man of about thirty-five years of age, with a full beard
-and moustache, shortly after my entrance handed me the paper he had
-been studying, saying, "Perhaps you would like to see the _Auckland
-Star_, just arrived by the evening train."
-
-I thanked him, and ran my eye over its columns. I did not take much
-interest in the New Zealand papers at that time, so was easily
-satisfied, and passed the paper on to the other occupant of the room,
-an elderly gentleman with a jovial countenance, whom the younger
-addressed as Doctor.
-
-Acquaintances are soon made in New Zealand hotels, and in a very short
-time we were all three chatting as though we had known one another for
-months.
-
-"Not long out from home?" questioned the bearded gentleman.
-
-"Only landed in Auckland on the third of July," I responded.
-
-"What do you think of the colony?" was the next question.
-
-"Well, I hardly like to express an opinion yet, but I certainly am not
-favourably impressed with the part I have just come from," I rejoined,
-naming the locality, "and feel half inclined to go back to the old
-country."
-
-"Your disappointment does not surprise me," returned my companion.
-"By Jove, sir, the way land companies and the banks have caused this
-part of the colony to be puffed up, has done more harm to New Zealand
-than anything else. I would not live here if they _gave_ me a house.
-You can't go out without being choked with dust when the weather's
-dry, and there is positively nothing attractive in the whole place.
-Now, where I live, it is altogether different. Beautiful country!
-virgin forests! an inland sea alive with fish--nice society--fishing,
-shooting, pig hunting, sailing--everything a man can wish for. It's a
-grand country--a _grand_ country, sir. Ah! that is a place worth living
-in; but this--bah!" Here he paused to relight his cigarette, which in
-his enthusiasm he had allowed to go out.
-
-Seizing the opportunity, I exclaimed--"I have no doubt it is all you
-describe, but I am a civil engineer, possessing very limited means, and
-anxious to get work, so fear it would never do or me."
-
-"Never do for you--why not?" resumed my hairy interlocutor. "Far better
-chance of getting occupation there than you'll ever have here. Just
-where your chance lies. County Council got no proper engineer--you on
-the spot--make your application--produce your testimonials, and the
-thing's done. Tell you what--I am going up here in about a fortnight;
-you come up with me. I'll put you up and show you the country. Know a
-property that will just suit you--lovely place--dirt cheap, sir! Good
-house--orchards--beautiful views--grand, sir--grand!"
-
-"What is the district called, and how far is it from Auckland?" I
-questioned.
-
-"The Kaipara--the Eden of the north island, sir! and not more than
-ninety miles from Auckland--thirty by rail and sixty by steamer,"
-replied my new acquaintance. "Delightful trip the water part. Don't
-think much of the railway part--never did like the railway--have too
-much of it perhaps--wretched accommodation--jerked and bumped nearly
-to death. Give me the water!" he proceeded enthusiastically. "Ah! when
-you've seen the Kaipara, you'll say it's lovely; I know you will. Take
-my advice, and come up with me!"
-
-I thanked him for his kind offer, which I promised to take into serious
-consideration, and writing my Auckland address on my card, I asked him
-to call when he reached town, and I would then be prepared with an
-answer. He promised to do so, and at that moment the first bell ringing
-from the dining-room, warned us to get ready for the evening meal.
-
-Having no further business to transact in Cambridge, I took the first
-train on the following morning for Auckland, which I reached in due
-course, and spent the evening detailing my adventures to my wife, and
-in consultation with her as to the best course for us to pursue. It
-seemed evident we must give up, at any rate for a time, the idea with
-which we left England, and it was equally clear that in order to live
-within my income I must buy a place with the few loose hundreds I had
-brought out, where I could keep a cow or two, and save rent, milk, and
-butter. I decided, therefore, to look at places that were for sale
-about Auckland so as to help me to come to a decision before my friend
-of the Cambridge hotel put in an appearance.
-
-I had looked over one property at Cambridge, which comprised a
-six-roomed house, and eight acres of land. The house was in very bad
-condition--quite uninhabitable indeed; and for it and the eight acres I
-was asked one thousand pounds.
-
-I saw several about Auckland, but could find nothing to suit me. My
-wife and I took a good many excursions together in this pursuit, but
-without avail. We also made some pleasure trips, one of which was to
-Mount Eden, lying directly behind the city. An easy ascent of between
-three and four hundred feet brought us to the lip of the crater, from
-which a magnificent view of the isthmus of Auckland and the surrounding
-country is to be obtained, the great number of volcanic cones visible
-forming a very remarkable feature in the landscape. They are, I
-believe, over sixty in number, and range in height from three hundred
-to nine hundred feet. No tradition exists among the Maoris of any
-eruption in the neighbourhood, though the fact that the Maori name for
-the highest peak, Rangitoto, means sky of blood, seems to imply that it
-has been active within their time.
-
-The inside of the crater of Mount Eden resembles a funnel or inverted
-cone covered with grass and plentifully strewn with lumps of scoria.
-It is very symmetrical in shape, and one would almost fancy it an
-artificial creation. There is indeed plenty of evidence of the
-work of human hands on Mount Eden in the shape of remains of Maori
-fortifications, though the natural and the artificial are so blended
-together and softened by time that it is difficult to say where the one
-ends and the other begins.
-
-When we had satisfied our appetites for landscape scenery, we descended
-the Mount, and spent some time examining the neighbourhood in the vain
-hope of tumbling across a place to be sold that would suit us. We were
-much struck with the elegant timber villa residences, surrounded by
-spacious verandahs, about which flowering creeping plants of various
-kinds, such as the yellow Banksian rose and the passion fruit with
-its splendid scarlet flower, climbed and hung in luxurious festoons.
-Some of the villas possessed gardens filled with beautiful flowers,
-including camelias, azaleas, spirœas, and many others only to be found
-in conservatories in England. Everywhere in the province of Auckland
-flowers of all kinds not only grow but flower most luxuriantly, and the
-lover of floriculture can indulge his hobby to the full.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-_A SALE BY AUCTION._
-
-
-It does not often fall to my lot to do shopping--one reason being
-that my wife is fond of doing it herself, and another that I detest
-the occupation. It happened, however, a few mornings after our Mount
-Eden trip, that some mutton chops were required, and as I was going
-into the town, my wife asked me to purchase three or four. To avoid
-the possibility of forgetting my commission, I headed straight for the
-flashiest-looking butcher's shop in Queen Street, gave my order, and
-on receiving the chops handed half-a-crown to the shopman, who to my
-intense surprise returned me a two-shilling piece.
-
-Four fine mutton chops for sixpence! Digest this information, my
-home readers, and then come out here if you like, and digest the
-three-halfpenny chops--they are every bit as good as English ones, and
-one-fifth of the money.
-
-Strolling down Queen Street with my purchases done up in a neat
-parcel, I was nearly knocked over by a man who suddenly rushed out
-of a doorway with a gigantic bell in his hand, which he commenced
-ringing violently. "What is the matter now?" thought I. "Can this be an
-opposition form of religion to the Salvation Army, in which the bell
-takes the place of the drum?" Determining to fathom the mystery of
-the man with the bell, I stationed myself as near to him as possible
-without running a risk of being rendered deaf for life, and watched
-events. Nobody appeared to take much notice of the performance, but
-I saw people from time to time entering the doorway from which the
-bellringer had emerged. "No doubt," I thought, "some kind of service is
-about to be held;" and I determined when the bell stopped to form one
-of the congregation. People were now flocking in pretty fast, and the
-bellman showed symptoms of fatigue, though he stuck to his work with
-all the ardour of a religious fanatic. At last the bell conquered the
-man, and entering the doorway I found myself in a large and rather dark
-room, along one side of which all sorts of articles of furniture were
-arranged. On a small raised platform with a rail in front, to which a
-desk was attached, stood a gentleman whom I immediately saw was not
-a parson, but an auctioneer, for in his hand he carried his baton of
-office--a small ivory hammer. Round him were crowded about one hundred
-shabbily dressed persons, a large proportion of whom were Jews. Just as
-I entered the auctioneer rapped sharply with his mallet on the desk in
-front of him and spoke as follows:--
-
-"Gentlemen, I have to-day to offer you some of the choicest articles
-of furniture that have ever come under my hammer, and I will but
-express the hope that you have brought with you plenty of money to
-buy with, and plenty of pluck to bid with, and proceed to business.
-Jim, move that chest of drawers forward, so that the gentlemen
-can see it. There, gentlemen, what do you say to that? a piece of
-furniture that would give a distinguished appearance to the meanest
-bedchamber--best cabinetmaker's work too. Shall we say five pounds for
-the chest of drawers? What, no bidders? Well, start it at what you
-like--say ten shillings for this magnificent piece of furniture--twelve
-shillings--fourteen shillings--one pound bid in two places--this
-remarkably handsome specimen of cabinetmaker's work going for one
-pound--twenty-five shillings bid," &c. &c., until it was finally
-knocked down for fifty shillings. The next thing disposed of was a
-clock, and then a sewing-machine was put up, which was just the thing I
-knew my wife wanted.
-
-"Gentlemen," said the auctioneer, "the sewing-machine I now have
-to offer to you is the property of a widow lady in distressed
-circumstances. I will with your permission read a letter I received
-from her at the time the machine was forwarded to me, and I am
-confident that you will sympathise with this poor bereaved lady, who
-has not only had the misfortune to lose her husband, but is now,
-alas! about to lose her sewing-machine!" He then read the letter, the
-contents of which I have forgotten, though I recollect it stated that
-the machine was a "Wheeler and Wilson" in good order.
-
-"Gentlemen," continued the auctioneer, "I am sure the letter I have
-just read must have excited feelings of compassion in each manly
-breast. Show it by bidding freely for the widow--or rather, I mean
-for the widow's sewing-machine. Shall we start it at a pound? What!
-no bid at a pound? Where are your bowels of compassion, gentlemen?
-Well, say ten shillings--ten shillings for a 'Wheeler and Wilson'
-sewing-machine--fifteen shillings for this splendid piece of
-mechanism--sixteen shillings offered--sixteen shillings for a beautiful
-widow's sewing-machine--seventeen shillings offered--eighteen shillings
-in two places for the widow--nineteen shillings--in perfect working
-order--one pound offered for this beautiful machine of a lone widow in
-good working order one pound two and six offered--any advance on one
-pound two and six?"
-
-"One pound five!" I shouted; and the second after down came the hammer,
-and the machine as my property. It was moved away by Jim into a little
-sideroom, and the auctioneer took down my name.
-
-I went to inspect my purchase, and to my disgust found it would not
-move, and also discovered it was not a "Wheeler and Wilson" at all.
-Catching sight of Jim, who was no other than the performer on the bell,
-I said--"Look here, my man, this is not a 'Wheeler and Wilson' machine
-at all, and it is all rusty and won't work!"
-
-"Can't help it, sir," replied Jim. "When you buys at auctions, you buys
-for weal or woe!"
-
-"Oh! the wheel's right enough, and there is no question about the
-whoa," I sarcastically remarked, "for it won't move an inch; but I
-will not pay for it; it's not a 'Wheeler and Wilson,' as the auctioneer
-stated!" and in a state of righteous indignation I strode out of the
-place, leaving my chops unwittingly behind me.
-
-There are eight or nine of these rooms, or marts, in Queen Street, and
-the system of selling all sorts of things daily by auction gives a
-sort of Cheap Jack air to the thoroughfare. Surely, if this method of
-disposing of goods of all descriptions is necessary to the happiness of
-the good citizens of Auckland, some side street might be selected in
-which the business could be carried on, and the peace and dignity of
-the principal thoroughfare in the city left undisturbed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-_THE FAITHLESS MARY ANN._
-
-
-One evening, shortly after my adventures in the auction room, the
-servant girl we had brought from England with us asked my wife's
-permission to go out for an hour or two. This was readily granted, and
-no more was thought of the matter until ten o'clock came, and with
-it no sign of Mary Ann. She had promised to return by nine, and was
-usually fairly punctual. We sat up waiting until eleven, wondering what
-could have happened, and then, deciding to give her up for the night,
-retired to bed.
-
-On the following morning there was still no sign of the girl, so I
-hurried down to the police station to ascertain if the inspector could
-assist me to obtain tidings of her. An interview with the sergeant in
-charge proved to me conclusively that Mary Ann as a speculation in
-servant girls was an utter failure, resulting in a dead loss to me
-of £50. He told me the police could do nothing unless a charge of a
-criminal nature was entered. I produced a document stamped a Somerset
-House, in which the girl agreed to remain in my service for three years
-at a specified rate of wages, on condition of my paying for her outfit
-and passage, and assured the sergeant that I had fulfilled my part of
-the agreement in every particular, giving her a most complete outfit
-and paying for a saloon passage. He, however, immediately floored my
-hopes in the document by telling me that no agreement of the kind
-signed in England was binding in the colony, and that to have made it
-so it should have been again signed before witnesses on reaching New
-Zealand.
-
-"No doubt," he said, "your servant acquainted herself with this fact,
-and has run away in order to secure the high wages to be obtained in
-the colony, though possibly there may be a sweetheart in the case."
-
-I assured him I did not think the latter at all likely, as one reason
-for her selection was her excessive plainness, which we considered
-sufficient to keep every man in New Zealand at a safe distance.
-
-He remarked that she must indeed be a "rum 'un" to look at, if
-she could not find a chap in New Zealand, for they weren't very
-particular; and regretting that he could not assist me, the interview
-came to an end, and I returned home in the hopes of learning some
-tidings there of the truant.
-
-Nothing, however, had been heard of her, though my wife had made a
-discovery in connection with her box, which at first sight appeared
-full of clothes, a waterproof cloak lying at the top. On removing this
-cloak, however, pieces of sacking and old rags were disclosed, and
-proved its sole contents.
-
-Mary Ann had evidently been taking away her things by degrees, carrying
-something away, probably, whenever she had had an evening out; and
-in case her box might be inspected, had kept it apparently full of
-things by stuffing in old rags under cover of the waterproof cloak. Oh!
-faithless Mary Ann. Your artfulness exceeded your ugliness, and our
-credulity exceeded both!
-
-I trust the experience narrated above may be of use to persons bringing
-servant girls out from the old country, and will show the necessity of
-getting an agreement signed as soon as the colony is reached.
-
-My readers will probably agree with me that the New Zealand law as
-expounded by the police sergeant is a most absurd and one-sided one,
-placing the master altogether in the servant's hands, as he has to find
-the money for her passage, and probably, as in my case, for her outfit
-as well, while he has only her word to rely on in return. It is not,
-however, the only law in New Zealand that requires alteration.
-
-We were now servantless, and until we could arrange about extraneous
-help it became necessary to investigate and to undertake those
-operations which comprise the duties of a general servant. My wife
-assumed of course the lead, and I seconded her to the best of my
-abilities--cooking, bed making, floor sweeping, chair dusting, fire
-lighting, potato peeling, and many other accomplishments of which up to
-that date we had had only a sort of vague conception, were now brought
-prominently under our notice, and became to us terrible realities.
-
-I advertised in the _Herald_ and _Star_ newspapers for a servant
-girl, and several responded, but none proved suitable, the wages
-asked averaging from twelve to sixteen shillings per week. Two, but
-lately arrived in New Zealand, called together one morning. My wife
-interrogated them. Neither knew anything of cookery, could not wash,
-and had very dim notions of a housemaid's duties.
-
-"Why, you could not have been getting more than eighteenpence a week
-each in England?" my wife exclaimed.
-
-"Perhaps not," one of them returned impudently; "but we ain't come
-all this way across the sea for sich wages as them. We wants twelve
-shillings a week, and a hevening hout when we likes, and neither on us
-won't go nowhere for no less."
-
-Further questioning after the delivery of this ultimatum was
-superfluous, and my wife hastened their departure.
-
-Servant girls, or "helps," as they prefer to be called, have a nice
-time of it at present in New Zealand. They demand extortionate wages,
-and dictate almost entirely their own terms. No character is ever
-demanded when application for a situation is made; to ask for one would
-probably bring the interview to an abrupt end. Latterly, Lady Jervois,
-the wife of his Excellency the Governor, has shown a great interest in
-a capital institution called the "Girls' Friendly Society," with which
-none but girls of good character are connected; and if ladies would
-make up their minds only to take girls through this Society, a very
-different class of servants would eventually become established in New
-Zealand. We at last succeeded in securing the services of a married
-woman for the daytime only, and were again fairly comfortable.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-_MY INTRODUCTION TO KAIPARA._
-
-
-One evening, about three weeks after my return from Cambridge, a hansom
-cab drew up at our door, and from it descended my bearded friend of
-the Cambridge hotel. I introduced him to my wife, to whom, when he was
-comfortably seated, with a refreshing beverage before him, he gave a
-glowing description of the Kaipara district.
-
-"Ah!" he exclaimed, with fervour, "when the time comes, as come it
-surely will, when people will exercise their own judgments, and not be
-led away by flaming puffs in the newspapers, or by extravagant reports
-made in the interest of land companies, then the North Kaipara will
-assume its proper position in New Zealand, and be known throughout the
-length and breadth of the land as the Eden of the North! You think me
-over enthusiastic, no doubt; but wait until your husband has returned
-from his visit, and he will be just as enthusiastic as I am."
-
-"But do you think he will be able to get work to do there?" questioned
-my wife.
-
-"Could not have a better chance. Sure to drop into the county
-engineership. Just the man they want. Any amount of work to be
-done--bridges, roads, and that sort of thing to be made; and, by
-the by, I am going to start a fish-preserving industry--a grand
-scheme--thousands of pounds to be made at it; got hold of a German
-preparation that will preserve anything. Have a partner in the Waikato
-district who has arranged sale for any amount of fish down there. I'm
-taking up a lot of tubs and German preparation to the Kaipara with me.
-If you settle up there, I'll make your husband manager until county
-engineership turns up."
-
-And so it was determined that I should spend a visit of a week's
-duration in the Northern Kaipara, and examine the property that was for
-sale. My portmanteau was therefore once more brought into requisition,
-and on the following Monday afternoon we took our seats in the train
-for Helensville, the terminus of the Northern line, from whence a
-steamer would convey us to our destination.
-
-The railway journey was decidedly uninteresting, the line passing
-through some most dreary looking country, which became more
-uninviting as we neared Helensville, a township only impressive by
-its unsightliness. It stands on a river whose discoloured waters run
-between two banks of mud.
-
-"Surely my bearded friend has been indulging in unlimited quantities
-of the colonial amusement known as 'gassing,'" I thought; and feeling
-very much tempted to return to Auckland, I expressed my opinion to my
-companion pretty freely.
-
-"I fully expected some remarks of the kind--fully expected them," he
-replied. "That wretched journey to Helensville is in a great measure
-responsible for so little being known of the North Kaipara. People come
-up as far as here, and are so disgusted that they turn back. Wait,
-however, till we have crossed the Kaipara Harbour, and then give me
-your opinion. I fancy it will have undergone a change, sir. Yes; I
-_rather_ fancy so. All I ask you is to wait."
-
-We slept that night at an hotel near the railway station, and were
-aroused from our slumbers about three o'clock in the morning, and told
-to "hurry up," as the boat was ready to start. After hasty ablutions,
-therefore, we struggled into our clothes, and speedily transferred
-ourselves to the deck of the _Kina_, a screw steamboat of fifty-three
-tons register, which was making noise enough with her horrible whistle
-and horn for a two thousand tonner.
-
-We steamed away between the mud banks, which gradually widened out, and
-at last disappeared altogether as the Kaipara Harbour was reached. This
-we crossed in about two hours, and steered for one of the many armlets
-of this inland sea, which intersect the Kaipara district in so peculiar
-a manner.
-
-The formation of the Northern Kaipara is indeed remarkable, and looks
-as though the land at some distant period had cracked and opened from
-the harbour in different directions, allowing the sea to rush in and
-form the beautiful creeks which everywhere abound. While crossing the
-harbour, my opinion, as prophesied by my companion and guide, began
-to undergo a change. The scenery there was very pretty; but when we
-were fairly in the armlet, which leads with many windings and turns to
-Pahi and Matakohe, I became thoroughly charmed. The virgin forests
-were there true enough--the native trees reaching to the very water's
-edge, with their hanging branches kissing its placid surface. Ferns in
-numberless variety--ranging from the gigantic tree fern with stem of
-twenty feet down to the dainty maiden hair, together with Nikau and
-cabbage palms--fringed the banks, and mingled with the darker green of
-the pohutukawa and other trees: at times bold grass-crowned bluffs of
-sand or lime stone met our view, giving place again to lovely little
-bays with bright shelly beaches and grassy slopes: ever and anon on
-either shore one caught glimpses of neat wooden houses, peeping out
-of nests of pine and gum trees, and surrounded by green fields of
-waving manuka--a background of high forest-covered hills completing the
-picture.
-
-I was enraptured. After my recent experience of New Zealand scenery
-it appeared to me perfection, and I was prepared fully to indorse my
-companion's remark that the North Kaipara was a place worth living in.
-
-The water teemed with fish, which were jumping in every direction,
-while birds of various kinds, including duck, teal, shags, eel-hawks,
-and flocks of godwit and red-shanked plover, added further life to the
-scene.
-
-At last the township of Pahi--where my friend resided--was reached, and
-on the steamer mooring to the wharf we landed.
-
-I was most hospitably entertained for a couple of days, and introduced
-to many of the settlers residing in the locality; and on the third day
-a visit to the gentleman with whom my companion had arranged I should
-spend a short time was undertaken. We left Pahi in a flat-bottomed
-punt, about fifteen feet long, painted black, and possessing an
-uncomfortable resemblance to a coffin with the lid off. The forward
-thwart, in which I noticed a split, was pierced for a mast; there was
-a seat about the centre of the boat for the rower, and another in the
-stern. Two large tubs and a package containing the German preserving
-preparation occupied the fore part of the cranky concern, while our
-portmanteaus were placed in the stern, and with a pair of sculls
-and a broken oar, to which a small sail was attached, completed the
-equipment. With some misgiving I stepped in, and we pushed off.
-
-"Are you going to row?" I asked.
-
-"Oh no, we'll sail--rowing is a waste of labour when you've got any
-wind," replied my companion, as he adjusted the stump of the oar in the
-hole in the damaged thwart. "You sit on the weather gunwale to keep her
-trim, and we shall be across in no time," he continued, seating himself
-in the stern, and steering by means of a scull.
-
-We found a pretty strong breeze blowing when we got well off the land,
-but the punt sat stiff enough with my weight on the weather gunwale,
-and we were going along at a grand rate, when an ominous crack was
-heard, and over went mast and sail on our lee-side as the damaged
-thwart gave way, whilst down went the weather gunwale with me on it. We
-did not upset, but we took in a good deal of water, and the bottom of
-my coat and a portion of my trousers were saturated. My friend, after
-an ineffectual attempt to reinstate the mast, applied himself to the
-oars, with the remark that "it was confounded bad luck," and in a short
-time we landed in a remarkably pretty bay with a white shelly beach.
-
-My friend's friend, Mr. M----, was there to meet us, and received me
-most kindly, saying he was extremely happy to make my acquaintance, and
-hoped I would stay with him as long as I could. He promised to give me
-some fishing, flat fish spearing, and pig hunting, and to take me to
-see the property to be sold, which, it appeared, belonged to my bearded
-friend's brother-in-law. I thanked him heartily, and at the same time
-expressed my fear that I had been guilty of considerable coolness in
-thus taking his house by storm, adding, "My friend here, however, must
-share the blame with me."
-
-"Oh! you don't know us up here, or you would never trouble your head
-about the matter: we're only too delighted to see you, and will do our
-utmost to make your visit an enjoyable one," returned my host; and
-thus commenced an agreeable acquaintance, which, I am happy to say,
-continues to the present time.
-
-Following him up a steep path winding in and out among high bushes of
-New Zealand flax, cabbage palms, fir, acacia, peach, and loquat trees,
-the house was reached, at an elevation of some sixty feet above sea
-level, and I was speedily placed on a friendly footing with my host's
-family, which consisted of his wife, five children, and a governess.
-
-In pleasant conversation the evening slipped away, and before we
-retired to rest, a programme, embracing a visit to the property for
-sale, a wild pig hunt, and a day's fishing, was drawn up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-_A WILD PIG HUNT._
-
-
-Next morning, after an ample, and, I may say, luxurious breakfast,
-pipes were lighted and a start made for the property to be
-inspected--distant about three quarters of a mile--to reach which
-another trip on the water had to be undertaken. A punt belonging to my
-host was got under weigh, and with two good men at the oars the journey
-was quickly accomplished, the latter part of our row being along a bank
-shaded by willow and other trees.
-
-We landed on a limestone beach, and a sloping ascent covered with tall
-grass brought us to the house. It possessed six rooms, and a passage
-running the entire depth, terminating a each end with a door. The
-sitting-room and but one bedroom were lined and papered, and the rest
-of the house was only in a half finished state. A verandah ran round
-three sides of it, but part of the flooring was wanting: to make the
-house comfortable a considerable outlay was required. The outdoor
-portion of the property consisted of two orchards, containing together
-three hundred and sixty fruit trees. In one of them were a number of
-well-grown peach trees covered with blossom, together with some orange,
-lemon, and other sub-tropical trees. The second orchard--about two
-acres in extent--was filled with apple and plum trees three or four
-years old. A grass paddock of fifteen acres enclosed by a wire fence, a
-stockyard and pigsties, three or four acres of very pretty bush fenced
-in and bordered on one side by the water, and an acre or two of grass
-land about the house planted with ornamental trees and flowering shrubs
-of various kinds, completed the property, for which four hundred pounds
-was asked.
-
-The view of the Kaipara from the verandah was lovely, and altogether I
-was extremely pleased with the place, though it was evident that the
-aid of a carpenter and painter would be required to make the house
-habitable. I determined, therefore, to think the matter over well and
-to ascertain the cost of completing the house before making any offer.
-
-The inspection over, we returned in the punt, and after lunch strolled
-over part of my host's farm of between four and five hundred acres. On
-the next day a pig hunt in the bush was arranged, in which Mr. C----,
-a sporting bachelor residing in the neighbourhood, was invited to
-participate. My bearded friend did not accompany us. We started about
-eleven in the morning, my host carrying a gun, Mr. C---- an axe and
-a butcher's knife, and myself a tomahawk. Three pig dogs--a breed, I
-think, between the bull and the collie--followed at our heels, and
-after walking about three quarters of a mile we entered the bush.
-
-How comes it, I wonder, that the magnificent New Zealand forests are
-stigmatised with the name of "bush." If we turn to the dictionary
-we find that bush means a thick shrub. The forests here, however,
-are composed principally of gigantic trees, not thick shrubs, and to
-give them such an unworthy name is only misleading. No scenery of the
-kind in any part of the world can excel in beauty the forests of New
-Zealand, and it is much to be deplored that they are not dignified with
-a more befitting title.
-
-The ground where we stood was clothed with ferns and mosses in
-endless variety. Immense trees stood here and there, whose moss and
-fern-covered trunks rose to a height of sixty or seventy feet, and
-then broke into a crown of branches which met and interlaced overhead,
-forming a canopy through which the light of day but dimly penetrated.
-
-[Illustration: Heavy Bush, Matakohe.]
-
-Nikau palms, tree ferns, and small native flowering trees grew
-between these giants, and from their branches hung clusters of lovely
-white clematis, bush lawyers, supplejacks, and other climbing plants.
-Although it was blowing freshly when we entered, not a breath of wind
-could now be felt, nor a sound heard, except the glorious deep note
-of the Tui--or parson bird--the harsh cry of the New Zealand parrot,
-and the gentle cooing of the pigeon. About us fluttered numbers of the
-bushman's little feathered friends--the fantails--spreading their large
-white fan-shaped tails as they darted hither and thither, and flew
-fearlessly within two feet of us. It seemed almost sacrilege to disturb
-the beautiful solemnity, but we had come to hunt wild pigs, and hunt
-them we must. My new sporting acquaintance was impatient, so away we
-went, the dogs heading us, and disappearing out of sight. We wandered
-on for some time in silence, listening for the dogs. At last one gave
-tongue, and we hastened in its direction; again the sound faintly
-rose, and shortly afterwards, further to our right, a distant noise of
-yelping, barking, and grunting reached our ears.
-
-"Come along! they have got a pig bailed up!" cried Mr. C----
-excitedly, as he plunged out of sight in the thick undergrowth, quickly
-followed by my host and myself.
-
-I found rapid bush travelling by no mean easy of accomplishment. At
-one moment my legs were caught in a supplejack, from which I would get
-clear, only to find myself firmly hooked by the claw-shaped thorns of
-the bush lawyer; then after a desperate struggle and many scratches
-would escape from its clutches, to become entangled the next minute in
-a bunch of Mangi-mangi, a fine wiry-stemmed creeper, which hangs in
-clusters from the trees.
-
-I ascertained afterwards that my companions carried pocket knives, and
-cut away the obstacles as they presented themselves. Being heavily
-handicapped by my inexperience, I arrived at the scene of action a bad
-third, though in time to see the _coup-de-grâce_ given by my host to a
-small pig which one of the dogs had seized by the ear while the other
-two were barking a chorus of approval.
-
-The animal being pronounced a good subject for discussion at the dinner
-table, was dressed on the spot by my two companions, and hung up in a
-tree with a piece of flax--a capital substitute for a rope--to await
-our return. A fresh start was then made, and the raid against the pigs
-prosecuted with vigour. The dogs seemed delighted with their success,
-and anxious to secure fresh laurels. In a short time a more open part
-of the forest was reached, and here the dogs started three large boars,
-which came tearing through the trees with bristles erect. A bullet from
-my host's gun slightly wounded one of them, and he turned and charged
-towards us, grinding his tusks in his rage. To reach us he had to cross
-a small gully with steep banks, and this he was no sooner in than a dog
-had him by each ear. He succeeded in ripping one, but the other held on
-bravely, and a crack on the head with the tomahawk finished the boar's
-career. He was too big and coarse for eating, so we left his body where
-it fell, and satisfied with our sport, turned for home, carrying to
-the edge of the bush the carcass of our first victim, which we tied on
-a fence, and our host on reaching the house sent his man back with a
-horse to bring it on.
-
-The last day of my visit was devoted to fishing. My bearded friend
-assumed command, and under his direction a fire was lit early in the
-morning beneath a large copper boiler; a certain proportion of the
-preserving powder was introduced in the water with which the copper
-was filled, and the mixture allowed to boil, while we sallied forth to
-catch the fish.
-
-A net about one hundred yards long was produced by my host, and laid
-in the punt, together with two stakes to fasten the ends in the mud.
-We put off, and in a couple of hours had captured over a hundred fine
-mullet, and as these were sufficient to fill the two tubs, the net was
-hauled up, and we returned to the shore. The fish were then packed in
-the tubs, the heads fitted on, and the preserving preparation poured
-over them through holes afterwards plugged with corks.
-
-The success of the day's fishing decided me to make an offer for the
-property I had inspected, and I finally agreed to purchase--a reduction
-being made on account of the unfinished state of the house.
-
-Having arranged with a local carpenter to do the necessary work, I
-returned to Auckland quite satisfied with my investment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-_PURCHASING LIVE-STOCK._
-
-
-I will not weary the reader with an account of our journey from
-Auckland to our new property. As soon as I heard that the house was
-ready for occupation, we bade adieu to Parnell, and after a somewhat
-tedious journey arrived at the Matakohe Wharf, where a large barge with
-two men in it awaited us. Into it all our goods and chattels, together
-with ourselves, some fowls, and a retriever pup, were stowed, and after
-half an hour's pull we disembarked on the limestone beach in front of
-our new dwelling.
-
-The carpenter who had been doing up the house had secured for us
-the services of a country girl, who, among other accomplishments,
-understood the arts of milking and butter making.
-
-My first care was to purchase a couple of quiet cows.
-
-One I bought from a sanctimonious individual, who assured me the animal
-was perfectly docile, stating as a proof that his little daughter was
-accustomed to milk her. Having sold me the cow, he expressed himself
-anxious as to my spiritual welfare, and preached me a short sermon in
-atrocious English on the subject of his own righteousness.
-
-Although the man was leaving the neighbourhood, I felt no hesitation
-in taking his word about the amiability of the cow--he seemed so
-oppressively pious. She was turned into my paddock, and in a few days
-one of my little boys came running breathlessly to me to say that she
-had a calf.
-
-I had been advised, when this event took place, to immediately take
-the calf away, and I accordingly proceeded to the paddock to do so,
-never anticipating any difficulty in the matter. To my surprise and
-alarm, however, when I got within about fifty yards of the animal,
-she suddenly lowered her head, and came straight for me, her rapid
-movements necessitating on my part a most ignominious and hasty
-retreat. On reaching safely the other side of the fence, I considered
-the matter over, and coming to the conclusion that my new "chumminess"
-in the matter of cows and calves must be to blame, sent to request the
-assistance of a settler living near. He was unfortunately out at the
-time, but a lad who was lodging with him said he would come down.
-
-On his arrival he inquired in supremely contemptuous tones, "What!
-can't yer take a calf away?"
-
-[Illustration: The Pious Man's Cow.]
-
-I replied that the mother had protested in so very forcible a manner
-against my interfering with her infant that I thought I must have
-gone the wrong way to work, and asked him if _he_ could undertake the
-business.
-
-To this he briefly responded, "Rather!" and marched off with a
-confident air to the scene of action, while I secured a vantage
-place outside the fence. No sooner, however, did the pious man's
-late cow catch sight of the would-be abductor, than she charged
-like a streak of lightning, and I don't believe that that--alas!
-no-longer-confident--youth ever before made such good use of his legs.
-When he was in safety, and had recovered breath enough to speak, he
-gasped out, "If that there cow belonged to me, I'd shoot her!" and
-strode off without another word, leaving me in the depths of despair.
-
-Later in the day, the labouring man I had first sent for--a
-solemn-looking individual, with a long beard--came down, and when I
-related what had occurred, said with a placid and reassuring smile that
-he would soon settle matters satisfactorily. Procuring a tea-tree stake
-about five feet long, he requested me to follow him into the paddock,
-and on the way laid down a plan of attack.
-
-"When I see's a propitchus oppertunity," said he, "I'll con-fūs-cate
-the calf; and if the parent animȳle precipices herself on me, as in all
-probableness she will, you must fetch her a right down preponderating
-blow atween the horns with this here tea-tree stake!"
-
-I did not like my allotted portion of this elegantly worded programme
-at all, and suggested that I should do the abduction part, while he
-"preponderated" the cow. This being agreed to, we cautiously entered
-the arena, and seizing my opportunity--and the calf at the same time--I
-retired at a speed that would have completely shamed a New Zealand
-express train. I never attempted to look round, but I heard a blow and
-a dull thud close behind, and knew something had happened.
-
-When outside the post and rail fence with my burden I breathed once
-more, and was delighted to see the settler standing triumphant, stake
-in hand, and the cow struggling on the ground. He had "preponderated"
-her in the most approved style, and the business was satisfactorily
-accomplished.
-
-I thanked him warmly; and foreseeing that a difficulty would probably
-arise in the milking of the brute, arranged with him to perform that
-office for a time. It was well I did so, for she proved a perfect
-"terror."
-
-To milk her it was not only necessary to put her in the bail--an
-arrangement which secures the head of the cow in somewhat the same
-manner as some of the old-fashioned instruments of punishment used to
-secure the head of a man--but it was also necessary to rope both her
-hind legs to prevent her from kicking. These operations had to be gone
-through night and morning, and caused a great deal of trouble and waste
-of time.
-
-No more pious men's cows for me.
-
-The vendor of the other animal did not pretend to possess any excessive
-amount of spirituality, and the cow turned out a splendid animal.
-
-I next directed my attention to horseflesh, as I found it impossible
-to get about on foot to see the country. I tried several animals, but
-could find none in the neighbourhood to suit my fancy.
-
-One evening a man rode in who was anxious to sell the quadruped he
-bestrode--a weedy-looking, weak-necked animal, standing about fourteen
-hands, decidedly shaky about the knees, and with a swelling on the
-off-stifle joint.
-
-"There's a 'oss for you," he began, "choke full of spirits. Just the
-animal to suit yer. A regler gentleman's 'oss he is, and no mistake."
-
-I remarked that I feared he would hardly be up to my weight.
-
-"Not up to your weight! Lor' bless you, he'd carry you like a
-bird--'e's all 'art, 'e is. My word, you should see 'im junk--'e'd junk
-a brick wall down, 'e would."
-
-I had never before come across the word "junk" in connection with
-equine accomplishments, but presumed it to be synonymous with "buck,"
-and expressed a wish to see the performance.
-
-"Ketch hold of these 'ere eggs then," said he, handing me a basket.
-He next proceeded to cut a switch, armed with which he remounted the
-"junker," and pulling hard at the reins with one hand, punished the
-unfortunate animal with the switch, at the same time digging the spurs
-well home.
-
-After pursuing these tactics for a short time, he looked over his
-shoulder at me and questioned, "Ain't 'e junking yet?"
-
-"No," I replied, not liking to confess ignorance of the term; "he does
-not seem to be 'junking' much."
-
-Another and a heavier dose of whip and spur torture was then
-administered, and at last the unhappy quadruped gave a feeble shake
-with one hind leg.
-
-"He's junking now a bit, I think," I cried, anxious to stop the
-exhibition.
-
-"Oh! that ain't nothink," replied the owner. "Lor' bless you, you
-should see 'im junk sometimes; he'd junk a brick wall, 'e would; but 'e
-ain't in spirits now."
-
-The latter fact I was fully prepared to corroborate, and may add that
-I did _not_ purchase the "junker."
-
-I eventually succeeded in getting suited, and was able to look about
-the country.
-
-The tremendously steep grades on the so-called roads astonished me very
-much, but the horses bred out here think nothing of them. In the winter
-time these roads are veritable bogs in some places, and travelling is
-then anything but pleasant. When they become slippery, the horses have
-a fashion of putting their feet together, throwing themselves well back
-on their haunches, and sliding down the steep inclines. They never
-come to grief, and all the rider has to do is to lean well back in the
-saddle.
-
-The main road through the county is supposed to be constructed by the
-local governing body, called the County Council, which is composed
-of representatives from the several ridings or districts forming the
-county, each riding electing a councillor every three years.
-
-Too often the sole aim of a councillor is to get as much done as
-possible for the road near his own house, and to secure as much
-compensation as he can for himself and his friends, therefore almost
-useless roads are frequently promoted, and the money frittered away
-in their construction and in compensation to the owners of the land
-through which they pass.
-
-The main county road here is not yet formed in places, and though
-large sums have been expended, there was very little in the way of
-solid, substantial work to be seen until the last few months. Matakohe
-belonged to the Hobson County Council, which has existed for over ten
-years; it now forms part of a new county called the Otamatea.
-
-County Councils have power to levy rates and taxes, and to borrow money
-from the Government under certain conditions, and they take care to
-exercise all their privileges in these respects.
-
-When the chairman of a County Council is a large employer of labour
-and a man of influence, his part of the county generally shows the
-best graded and best metalled roads. Besides the County Councils, many
-of the ridings--of which Matakohe is one--possess Road Boards, also
-empowered to levy rates, and with the money carry out works on branch
-roads.
-
-It is very commonly believed that the country would progress far more
-rapidly if County Councils were abolished and the different districts
-represented solely by Road Boards, which would determine the works
-considered most desirable, and draw up half yearly reports to be laid
-before a Government engineer, who, after examining into the merits of
-the schemes proposed, would finally decide on those most likely to be
-beneficial to the county, and which could be undertaken with the funds
-in hand.
-
-Enough, however, for the present of County Councils. The Matakoheans
-can certainly have no wish to uphold the system, as very little indeed
-has been done for their district by the county to which it, until quite
-lately, belonged. Its misfortune in this respect may have been due to
-its _situation_; it certainly was not due to its size, for Matakohe
-formed one of the largest ridings in the county.
-
-It boasts of between forty and fifty private houses scattered over
-a somewhat large area; a good-sized public hall where concerts, tea
-and prayer meetings, dances and theatrical performances are held from
-time to time; a chapel used on alternate Sundays by the Wesleyans and
-Church of England people; a cemetery, a Government school-house, a
-public library, &c. &c.; three general stores (or shops, as they would
-be called in England); a saw-mill, a tremendously long wharf in a
-tremendously inconvenient place, and a capital racecourse, here the
-Matakohe Racing Club holds an annual meeting.
-
-Horse-racing is one of the great national amusements of New Zealanders,
-and there are very few settlements in the Northern Kaipara which do not
-number owners of racehorses among their inhabitants.
-
-In England racing is associated with betting, blacklegs, welshers,
-suicides, and other disagreeable things: out here, as far as small
-country meetings are concerned, it means genuine, honest, legitimate
-sport, and should be encouraged, as calculated to improve the breed of
-horses in the colony, and to do a great amount of good to the districts
-in which the meetings are held.
-
-A sort of betting-machine called the "Totalisator" has indeed been
-legalised by the New Zealand Government, but may only be used at race
-meetings where prizes of thirty pounds and upwards are given. It
-therefore does not affect in any way small meetings like ours, and the
-Matakohe Racing Club have no desire that it should.
-
-For the benefit of my readers who are unacquainted with the
-betting-machine, I will endeavour to describe the manner in which it
-is worked. The intending speculator enters small office and buys his
-ticket, or tickets, according to his rashness, and then proceeds to
-examine a board on one of the walls of an inner chamber, where are
-displayed certain variable numbers arranged in the following manner:--
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, represent the starting horses in the
-order shown on the Racing Club's card. They may therefore be taken to
-stand instead of the horses' names.
-
-In the illustration above seven horses are supposed to be going to run.
-The numerals underneath in the squares indicate the number of tickets
-invested on each horse, and the top square records the total tickets
-sold.
-
-When the investor has consulted his "correct card," and decided on
-what horse to place his ticket, he gets it stamped with its number,
-and the figure or figures on the board under the selected horse and
-those representing the total tickets sold are each moved on one. A few
-minutes before the race a bell is rung, and the totalisator closed,
-and after the event is decided the total proceeds--less ten per
-cent.--are divided among those who have placed their tickets on the
-winning horse. Thus in the illustration, supposing No. 6 won, and the
-tickets a pound each, the wily individual who placed his money there
-would receive ninety pounds; if No. 3 won, each of the five investors
-would receive a dividend of eighteen pounds; if No. 1, a dividend of
-one pound eighteen shillings and three-pence, and so on. The ten per
-cent. deducted from the receipts is divided between the proprietors of
-the machine and the Jockey Club; and inasmuch as fourteen or fifteen
-thousand pounds generally passes through it at one of the large Racing
-Club Meetings, the totalisator will be seen to be a paying concern.
-The advisability of taxing it was mooted in Parliament last year; and
-as our sage administrators of the law have deemed it right to make the
-betting-machine legal, surely they cannot be wrong in taxing it heavily
-as a luxury.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-_A COLONIAL BALL._
-
-
-We had not been long settled in Matakohe when an invitation to a ball
-at Mr. M----'s was received, asking us to go early in the day, as
-the tide then suited best, to bring our evening clothes with us, and
-to dress there. We accomplished the journey in my punt, for I had by
-this time one of my own, and on our arrival at Mr. M----'s found the
-household very busy with preparations.
-
-One half the spacious verandah had been closed in with canvas, and
-formed a supper room. It was decorated with flags, Nikau palms, ferns,
-and flowers with very pretty effect. The other half was to be utilised
-as a promenade, and was hung with Chinese lanterns.
-
-As the afternoon advanced, guests began to arrive--some on horseback,
-and some by boat. They all brought their evening clothes with them,
-not in portmanteaus, but in _flour bags_. It is most surprising to a
-new chum to see the manifold uses to which flour bags are put to here.
-Besides usually taking the place of portmanteaus, they are made into
-aprons, kitchen cloths, dusters, and sometimes even into trousers for
-boys. Not long ago I met a lad with a pair on. On one leg, printed in
-large red letters, was "Wood silk dressed;" and on the other "Lamb's
-Superfine." Almost every one bakes at home in the country, so flour
-bags are very plentiful.
-
-Rather late in the afternoon a gentleman arrived in a punt with his
-wife. It was nearly low water, and he got stranded in the mud fully a
-quarter of a mile from the beach. Finding he could not get the punt
-any further, he jumped overboard--sinking immediately nearly up to his
-waist--and pushed the punt with his wife in it to the shore. Changing
-his clothes in a boat-house on the beach, he shortly after appeared at
-the house as though nothing unusual had occurred, and I don't think
-considered his adventure worthy of mention to any one.
-
-I have had several mud-larking experiences myself since then, but
-have not yet learned to behave with the _sang froid_ displayed by the
-gentleman on this occasion.
-
-When the time arrived for donning our dress clothes, I was ushered into
-a huge barn standing close to the house, where several washing basins,
-brushes and combs, looking-glasses and other toilet necessaries had
-been placed in position on tables and boxes. Between thirty and forty
-gentlemen, in various stages of dressing, were there, and jokes and
-repartee were being bandied about freely. Several of the gentlemen
-caricatured in that amusing book, "Brighter Britain,"--written after a
-visit of the author to this part of the colony,--were present, and most
-of them had already called and made my acquaintance.
-
-The feat of dressing accomplished, and having succeeded in arranging my
-tie in some sort of fashion by the aid of a hand-glass and flickering
-candle, I proceeded to the drawing-room, from whence already issued the
-enlivening strains of one of Godfrey's valses.
-
-The settlers up here, and in the province of Auckland generally, are
-most enthusiastic about dancing. Young and old, married and single,
-all delight in it, and no opportunity of indulging in a dance is ever
-neglected.
-
-Flirtation I have never seen attempted, and conversation indeed is only
-sparsely carried on. It is in the dancing itself that the enjoyment is
-centred, and to it the attention of both ladies and gentlemen is almost
-wholly directed. An anxious expression is ofttimes observable on the
-face of a male performer, as though his whole mind was concentrated in
-the effort to acquit himself well in the task before him; but though is
-countenance depicts no pleasurable emotion, he doubtless enjoys himself
-immensely.
-
-On the present occasion dancing was carried on with unrelaxed vigour
-until past midnight, when a move was made to the supper room. The inner
-man refreshed, dancing was resumed, and day began to dawn before the
-party broke up.
-
-The greater part of the ladies slept at the house, though some rode
-straight away after donning their riding-habits. The gentlemen, about
-forty in number, were accommodated in the barn with beds of soft hay
-and rugs.
-
-The ease with which the ladies out here do without the paraphernalia,
-considered in England as necessary in preparing for a ball, struck
-me greatly at this, my first colonial one. The dressing of a young
-lady at home is a big affair, embracing an elaborate costume, an
-equally elaborate toilette, hair-dressing, and goodness knows what
-all, and concluding generally with an elaborate bill. Out here a
-light dress of muslin or some similar material, relieved with a little
-ribbon, and hair ornamented with a flower or two, constitutes the
-full evening costume of a young lady. She looks quite as nice as her
-semi-manufactured rival in England, and there is no prospect of a big
-bill for papa in the immediate future to mar her evening's amusement.
-
-The gentlemen are equally negligent. If they have dress clothes, they
-put them on; but if they have not, they appear in whatever cut of black
-coat they happen to be the proprietors of, and enjoy themselves every
-bit as much as their swallow-tailed companions.
-
-Before I left Mr. M----'s residence, he informed me that the
-fish-preserving scheme had turned out a failure, and that my bearded
-acquaintance had received a letter from his partner in the Waikato,
-in which he stated that the fish forwarded in the two tubs had sold
-readily at one shilling each, but had made all who partook of them very
-ill. "He presumed," he wrote, "that there must be something wrong with
-the German preserving preparation," and concluded by stating that as he
-had no wish to be apprehended for manslaughter, he must decline to have
-anything more to do with the business.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-_THE FORESTS OF NORTH NEW ZEALAND._
-
-
-With the failure of the German preparation, my hopes of being made
-manager to the Fish Preserving Company vanished. I cannot say I had
-built much on it, so did not take the matter very deeply to heart.
-If the industry had been fairly started, the post of coroner in the
-Waikato might have been worth looking after. The ultimatum of the
-Waikato partner, however, nipped the business in the bud, and probably
-saved some lives.
-
-No prospect of getting professional work had yet shown itself; and the
-only post I had succeeded in obtaining was that of correspondent to the
-Auckland weekly paper, an appointment of not a very lucrative nature.
-
-Time, however, by no means hung heavily on my hands. There was plenty
-to do about my place, which had been much neglected. The weeds were
-disputing possession with the fruit trees, and had they been left
-undisturbed much longer I think would have gained the day. A peculiar
-kind of thistle, called the "cow thistle," grew everywhere luxuriantly,
-and docks with roots as thick as a man's arm were abundant.
-
-I became familiarised with hoeing, digging, pruning fruit trees, and
-the use of the axe. The latter is a most necessary accomplishment in
-this part of the colony, as to the axe every one trusts for his supply
-of fuel. When I first attempted to wield it, each blow struck jarred
-my hands and arms tremendously, and at the same time made little
-impression on the wood; but at last I caught the trick, and am now a
-fairly good axeman.
-
-Small tea-tree, or "Manuka," to use the native name, is principally
-used for firing. The wood is hard and close-grained, and gives out
-a great amount of heat. It grows in large and dense patches called
-"scrub." The trees in the scrub generally stand about a foot apart, run
-up straight for some twelve feet, and then break into a small bunch of
-branches. If tea-tree happens to be isolated, it becomes a spreading
-tree of fair dimensions, though it never grows sufficiently large to be
-employed much in carpentering. It is always more or less in flower--a
-beautiful small white flower--with which at some seasons of the year
-it is completely covered. Not only is tea-tree universally used for
-firewood, but it supplies the material of which most of the fences up
-here are composed, and is preferred to any other wood for wheel-spokes.
-It is, therefore, one of the most useful natural productions of the
-colony.
-
-North New Zealand boasts of a great variety of splendid timber, of
-which the Kauri pine (_Dammara australis_) takes the lead. These giants
-of the forest attain a girth sometimes of between forty and fifty
-feet, and grow up perfectly straight for sixty or seventy feet before
-throwing out branches. They reminded me when I first saw them of the
-toy trees with little round stands that used to be sold with boxes
-containing wooden animals. If the reader can imagine one of these toy
-trees magnified some six or seven hundred times, he will have a fair
-idea of what a Kauri looks like. Its foliage resembles somewhat that
-of the ornamental shrub known as the "Monkey plant," the leaves being
-stiff and glossy.
-
-The Kauri is used more extensively than any other New Zealand wood
-for building purposes. It is a magnificent timber, and if properly
-seasoned, neither shrinks nor warps. Very few of the bush owners,
-however, can afford to let timber lie idle for any length of time, and
-therefore the majority of the Kauri used is not seasoned, and shrinks
-very much both ways. So much is this the case, and so unreliable is
-the timber considered through insufficient seasoning, that a clause
-has been inserted in the specification for the New Auckland Custom
-House, now about to be erected, which states that Baltic timber, and
-not Kauri, is to be used for sashes, architraves, mouldings, &c. As
-Kauri is very easily worked, and admits of a splendid polish, it is
-greatly to be regretted that with such timber in the province the
-architect should have deemed it necessary to specify Baltic timber. It
-is nevertheless true, however; and the cause may be summed up in six
-words, "High wages and want of capital," the great bane of New Zealand,
-felt not only in the timber trade, but in all other industries that
-have been established.
-
-In getting out the Kauri, an immense and at times reckless destruction
-of young trees takes place, and for this reason the time is not far
-distant when the Kauri pine will be a tree of the past.
-
-From an official report of Mr. T. Kirk, F.L.S., Chief Conservator of
-State Forests--for a copy of which I am indebted to the courtesy of
-Mr. S. P. Smith, Assistant Surveyor-General--it appears that the total
-extent of available Kauri forest now existing does not exceed two
-hundred thousand acres, and placing the average yield at the high rate
-of fifteen thousand superficial feet per acre, the Kauri at the present
-demand will be exhausted in twenty-six years. If, however, the demand
-increases in the same ratio as it has shown during the last ten years,
-it will be worked out in fifteen years. When we consider that the Kauri
-timber trade is one of the mainstays of the North Auckland district,
-this is a most alarming statement. The export trade amounted last year
-to the value of £136,000--more than five times as much as the timber
-trade of all the rest of the colony put together; and it is difficult
-to see what is to take its place when the last Kauri has been felled.
-In Mr. Kirk's report no allowance is made for probable loss by bush
-fires, which in the dry weather are constantly breaking out, and which
-are generally ascribed, rightly or wrongly, to the carelessness of
-gumdiggers or to vindictiveness. Fires in the heavy Kauri bush last a
-long time when they once get hold, and do an immense amount of damage.
-There is a Kauri bush at the present time on fire in this riding of
-Matakohe which has been alight for the last five or six months. A large
-quantity of timber must be destroyed in this way, and the contingency
-of fire further lessens the probable duration of the Kauri forests of
-North New Zealand.
-
-The task of felling and getting the timber out of the bushes is a
-difficult and dangerous one. The country north of Auckland, where Kauri
-abounds, is usually very broken, and seldom admits of a tramway being
-laid down to carry the logs on. When the timber is on high ground, the
-usual method adopted is to cut the logs into suitable lengths with
-cross-cut saws, move them by means of timber jacks and immense teams of
-bullocks to the brow of a convenient incline, and let them slide down
-a well-greased shoot composed of young Kauri trees, a great number of
-which are thus annually destroyed.
-
-If the bush happens to be on the borders of the Kaipara, the logs are
-placed behind booms until enough are collected to make a raft. If,
-however, it is situated some little distance from deep water, the logs
-are laid in the bed of an adjacent creek, higher up in which a dam is
-formed and the water stored. When sufficient logs are collected, and
-sufficient water stored behind the dam, the sluices are opened, and
-the logs washed down to the Kaipara, where they are gathered, chained
-together, and towed to their destination.
-
-Ordinary Kauri timber presents, when polished or varnished, a
-wavy appearance, and is darker in some places than in others; but
-occasionally Kauri is mottled, and when this is the case it is very
-valuable for veneering purposes, being worth from £3 to £5 per hundred
-superficial feet, while the average price of ordinary Kauri is only ten
-shillings per hundred feet.
-
-The mottling is sometimes caused by the tree throwing out an excessive
-number of branchlets, and at others by a sort of disease in which the
-too rapid development of cellular tissue prevents the proper expansion
-of the bark, and small portions become enclosed in the sap wood, and
-form the dark mottlings. Mottled Kauri trees are usually found in rocky
-situations.
-
-The total area covered by forest in the North Auckland provincial
-district--of which the Kaipara forms a part--is estimated by the
-chief surveyor to be seven million two hundred thousand acres, about
-one million six hundred and seven thousand acres being held by the
-Crown. One peculiar feature in these forests is that while they possess
-several trees--among others the Kauri--not to be met with in any other
-part of New Zealand, they still contain all the trees found elsewhere
-in the colony.
-
-The Puriri (_Vitex littoralis_), sometimes called the New Zealand oak,
-is perhaps next in importance to the Kauri, on account of its great
-durability. It is principally used for railway sleepers, house blocks,
-framings of carriages, and fencing posts. It makes excellent furniture,
-and is said to equal the English oak in strength and durability.
-Sometimes the tree grows to a height of twenty feet in the trunk, and
-Puriri logs have been cut nine feet in diameter.
-
-The Kahikatea (_Podocarpus dacrydioides_), a white pine, is a
-magnificent-looking tree, often reaching a total height of one hundred
-and fifty feet, with a barrel clear of branches seventy-five feet long.
-Its timber is highly valued for the inside lining of houses.
-
-The Totara (_Podocarpus totara_) is employed in making wharf piles,
-telegraph posts, sleepers, and in the construction of houses and
-furniture. It occasionally grows to a height of seventy feet or so,
-perfectly straight, without a knot or branch, and is used by the
-natives for making canoes, some of which, seventy feet in length, have
-been hollowed out of Totara logs. It is the only wood that successfully
-withstands the ravages of the _Teredo navalis_.
-
-The Pohutukawa (_Metrosideros tomentosa_) is a very handsome tree,
-usually to be found growing near the water's edge. At Christmas time it
-is covered with beautiful red blossoms, and on that account is called
-New Zealand holly. The trunk is very hard, and is invaluable for knees
-and timbers of ships and boats.
-
-The Rata (_Metrosideros robusta_) has until lately been considered by
-most people to be altogether a parasite, but it has now been proved
-beyond doubt that its seed is deposited by birds, or the wind, in the
-fork of a tree, where it germinates and sends forth two or three roots
-which creep down the trunk to the ground. These roots, as they grow,
-press on the supporting tree, until they cause its death, and the Rata
-then stands alone. The wood is very hard, and when not too twisted, may
-be split into very good fencing rails.
-
-The Rimu (_Dacrydium cupressinum_) is a very stately pine, with
-drooping branches like the weeping willow. It grows up straight for
-about sixty feet, with a slightly tapering barrel some two or three
-feet in diameter at the ground. The grain of this wood is red, streaked
-with black, and it makes splendid furniture, balustrades and railings
-for staircases, panels for doors, &c.
-
-There are a great many other varieties of trees in the North Kaipara
-forests, which, however, I will content myself with stating are most
-of them exceedingly beautiful in grain, and should find places of
-honour in cabinet and furniture makers' work. In spite, however, of the
-beautiful woods at command, the furniture-making trade has made but
-little progress in Auckland, and I presume the high price of labour and
-want of capital prevent it from being pushed.
-
-The bushman who fells the timber and rolls out the logs receives an
-average wage of thirty shillings a week, as well as his food, or,
-as it is called here, his "tucker;" the towing charges are high,
-and the railway rates from Helensville to Auckland exorbitant; and
-so by the time the timber has passed through the mills and left the
-furniture-maker's hands, the excessive payments for labour, railway and
-towing charges, have made the articles into which it has been converted
-so expensive, that the trade is killed.
-
-The annual output of timber in the Auckland district is estimated at
-about one hundred million superficial feet, and the larger proportion
-is employed in the construction of houses, bridges, &c., in the colony.
-
-Timber houses are a great deal more durable than many people would
-imagine: there are some still standing in Auckland--in fairly good
-condition--built nearly forty years ago. The mode of erection usually
-adopted is briefly as follows. Puriri blocks, sunk in the ground deep
-enough to insure a good foundation, and of sufficient length to project
-above the surface two or three feet, are set up in rows four or five
-feet apart. On these blocks--the tops of which are sawn off perfectly
-level with one another--is laid a frame of timber, marking out the
-rooms and passage, and on this the superstructure is raised. Instead
-of slates or tiles, thin strips of wood, called shingles, split off
-small blocks of Kauri, are most commonly used for the roofing, though
-corrugated iron sometimes takes their place. In the better class of
-house a brick chimney runs through the structure, but in the smaller
-and cheaper ones a wide wooden chimney is erected at one end.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-_THE LABOURING-MAN SETTLER._
-
-
-I trust the kind reader will excuse the somewhat sudden departure from
-my narrative to the forests of North New Zealand, which characterised
-the last chapter, and will now also pardon an equally abrupt return to
-my humble doings.
-
-When in Auckland I had bought three or four books on colonial fruit
-culture, all of which I found, on investigating their contents,
-advocated thorough drainage. I therefore made up my mind to attempt
-to drain my smaller orchard, and in order to do so successfully,
-carefully took the levels, and planned out the drains. I tried digging
-them myself, but the work progressed so slowly, and my hands became
-so uncomfortably blistered, that I was obliged to call in extraneous
-aid, and applied to a labouring man, a settler in the district, for his
-assistance. His terms were seven shillings a day, which I with much
-reluctance agreed to give. He arrived at the scene of his labour at
-eight o'clock on the morning following my interview with him, took a
-full hour in the middle of the day for his dinner, and left off work at
-five P.M. with a punctuality worthy of a better cause. At the end of
-three days he had opened one drain to the required depth; it would take
-ten of them to drain the orchard, and they would require, in order to
-keep them open, filling up with tea-tree, the cutting and carrying of
-which would probably equal the cost of the digging. I therefore came
-to the conclusion that draining my orchard would go a good way towards
-draining my purse, and determined to abandon the project.
-
-The labouring man, when I informed him of my resolution, said, with a
-melancholy air of superior wisdom, "I guessed you'd soon get tired of
-it," and appeared quite resigned to his dismissal.
-
-Among the labouring-men settlers (by which expression I mean those
-who go out to work at so much a day) there is to be found a type of
-humanity quite distinct from any other I have ever met with. Specimens
-of this class are sometimes just sufficiently educated to be able to
-read and write, and sometimes have no education at all, but still
-they believe themselves--truly and earnestly believe themselves--to
-be gentlemen. They are to be distinguished by solemn-looking faces,
-to which beards are generally attached. They very seldom smile, never
-laugh, and always speak slowly and deliberately, often using long words
-in wrong places.
-
-This variety of the labouring-man settler delights in being called
-by the prefix Mr.----, and it would give him unspeakable joy to
-receive a letter addressed Mr.----, Esq. Imported probably into New
-Zealand in its early days, he knows little more than the Maori about
-the doings of the great world. Yet he is very self-opinionated, and
-considers Auckland the finest city in the universe. He does a good deal
-of "gassing" in a solemn manner, which inclines a stranger to give
-credence to his romances, until their dimensions become too large to
-be swallowed. In spite of these little failings, he is steady, honest,
-temperate, and his chief fault lies in his believing himself to be what
-he is not, and what he never can be. He is a square man continually
-trying to fit himself into a round hole, a task impossible for him to
-accomplish, while the effort to do so sours is disposition and renders
-him melancholy. He either possesses extreme religious views, and is
-very bigoted and narrow-minded, or he has no religion of any kind. Of
-course he owns land, given him by the Government that brought him out.
-He works fairly hard on his own property--harder, I am inclined to
-think, than he does when engaged on any one else's; and the fact of his
-being a landed proprietor, probably gives him the impression that he
-_must_ be a gentleman, and is the cause of all his futile strivings and
-unhappiness.
-
-I do not mean for one moment to assert that all the labouring-men
-settlers are like the above. There are many who have been soldiers,
-sailors, or have followed some occupation, before they settled in New
-Zealand, which has given them opportunities of seeing life. Their views
-are therefore larger and wider, and they have learnt how to laugh.
-Still, in most of the settlements I am acquainted with, are to be found
-some examples of the class of settler I have described.
-
-Having abandoned the drainage scheme, I turned my attention to
-effecting other improvements, and amongst them built a small pier or
-wharf of limestone rock, at the sea end of which I kept my punt, and so
-could get away in it as soon as the tide came in, instead of having to
-push it over the rough limestone beach.
-
-One day a young Matakohe settler called, and asked me if I would care
-to join a small party, to ride out on the following morning to the
-Wairoa swamp, to try and destroy a dangerous wild bull that was roaming
-about there, and which a few days previously had gored the speaker's
-horse, when he was cattle-hunting, he himself only escaping by jumping
-into a creek. He also told me there were great numbers of Pūkĕkŏ or
-swamp-hens there, and that after despatching the bull, we might be able
-to have some Pūkĕkŏ shooting. I at once agreed to join the party, and
-that night visions of roaring bulls with distended nostrils, lowered
-heads, and erected tails attended my slumbers.
-
-I awoke next morning with a sort of Gordon Cumming feeling about me,
-and made preparation for my first day's big game shooting. Armed with
-a rifle and fowling-piece, I mounted my horse, and sallied forth to
-the place of rendezvous, where our party, four in number, had already
-assembled, and after a ride of about nine miles, we reached the edge of
-the swamp. Two of the party who had not brought guns, then proceeded on
-horseback, to discover the whereabouts of the game, and one of them
-dismounted to examine a clump of tea-tree, growing on a high mound
-about four hundred yards out on the swamp.
-
-There the animal was, sure enough, and the rash disturber of his peace
-had only time to climb a friendly cabbage-tree when he charged.
-
-We could see the man in the tree, but no sight of any animal, and
-wondered what he could be doing up there, until he shouted out that he
-was bailed up by the bull. Upon receiving this intelligence we sallied
-forth to endeavour to persuade the beast to raise the siege, and the
-mounted settler, by cracking the stock whip which he carried in the
-vicinity of the scrub, at last succeeded in getting the bull to come
-out on to the open swamp, when I immediately fired and put a rifle
-ball through his stomach. Another bullet from a fowling-piece brought
-him to the ground, and thus ended my first and only bull hunt--a very
-tame affair. If the animal had seen and charged us when we were on foot
-on the open swamp, before I handicapped him with a bullet, it would
-probably have been quite exciting enough for some of us, but as it
-turned out, the bull did not give half the sport the pious man's cow
-afforded, when her calf was taken away.
-
-There are great numbers of wild cattle in the back country of this
-district, and I am told that most exciting adventures at times take
-place with them, though I cannot speak from experience.
-
-The two settlers who had not brought their guns, skinned the carcass
-of the animal we had shot, and cut off some of the choicest pieces of
-its flesh; and while they were so employed, the rest of us went on
-the swamp to shoot Pūkĕkŏ, which were there in great numbers. Every
-minute or two, as we pushed our way through the tall Raupo grass,
-Pūkĕkŏ would rise about thirty yards ahead, and we had some very pretty
-shooting, and made a heavy bag. The Pūkĕkŏ belongs undoubtedly to the
-same family as the familiar moorhen of the old country. It is, however,
-much larger, and is a very handsome bird. The neck, breast, and body
-are bright blue, the wings black, and the underneath part of the tail
-white. It has a flat red sort of comb or crown on the top of the head,
-and red feet. Its flesh is very good to eat in the New Zealand autumn,
-but only at that time of year.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-_KAIPARA FISH._
-
-
-Although I had been defeated in my scheme of draining my orchards,
-I did not on that account give them up in despair, but endeavoured
-to improve the condition of each tree by lightly digging round it,
-and mulching it with the weeds I had taken off the land. They seemed
-all to be growing nicely, and the peaches the first season yielded a
-tremendous crop of most delicious fruit; so many indeed had we, that
-besides almost living on them ourselves, we fed the pigs with them.
-It was a great season everywhere in North New Zealand for peaches,
-but since then some sort of blight has universally attacked the older
-trees. The why or the wherefore of the disease remains a mystery,
-and the matter is greatly exercising the minds of the most eminent
-authorities in the colony. All sorts of theories have been put forward,
-but no satisfactory solution has been arrived at. One might almost
-fancy that some personage possessing mysterious power, and suffering
-from too free indulgence in the delicious fruit, had cursed them, as
-the Abbot in the Ingoldsby Legends cursed the Jackdaw of Rheims.
-
-Other fruit-trees, both English and sub-tropical, grow and fruit
-remarkably well in the North Kaipara, in spite of the fact that not a
-single orchard anywhere is drained. If every advantage were given the
-trees, what would they not produce!
-
-The climate is eminently suitable to fruit-tree culture, and the slopes
-of the undulating hills present everywhere opportunities for planting
-snugly sheltered orchards. Fruit-growing ought to become one of the
-standard industries of the district; but before that can happen, the
-railway charges must be lowered very considerably. The first apple
-season after I was settled in Matakohe, I sent a case of splendid
-apples down to Auckland to be sold, and the sale just covered the
-freight.
-
-The excessive and prohibitive railway charges tend to stop all
-enterprise. The railways are supposed to have been constructed to open
-up the country, develop its resources, and induce settlement; but as
-they are at present managed, it would be absurd to think of starting
-any industry, in which they would have to play an important part as
-carriers. Cheap railway freights and fares would naturally have a
-tendency to enhance the value of the land in the country which came
-within their influence, bringing it as it were in closer contact with
-the centres of population, and it may therefore be inferred that owners
-of suburban estates--which must suffer by country properties being
-rendered more marketable--are by no means anxious for any alteration in
-the railway tariff, and suburban landowners are a power in the colony.
-The time must come, however, when in spite of all opposition, the
-freights will be lowered, and the sooner the better for the prosperity
-of New Zealand, and for the fruit-growing industry of the Kaipara.
-Enough, however, of railway mismanagement.
-
-A settler who understood netting had made me a small fishing-net, and
-fish now formed a prominent feature at our table. Fishing wasted a
-good deal of time, however, as most of the fish are caught in narrow
-channels when the tide is running out, and the punt almost invariably
-was left high and dry, and had to remain until the tide flowed. I
-always in a day's fishing caught a great many more fish than we
-required for our own use, and it occurred to me to enclose a portion of
-the beach below high-water mark with a wall, so as to form a miniature
-fish-pond to keep the surplus fish in. As the tide flowed a self-acting
-valve let the water in, but prevented it from flowing out again when it
-ebbed. A lever connected with this valve, allowed me to empty the pond
-at pleasure.
-
-[Illustration: My Fish Pond.]
-
-The piscatorial residence--forty-six feet long, twenty-three feet
-wide, and five and a half feet deep--being ready for occupation, the
-next question to determine, was how to keep the fish alive after
-they were caught, until they could be transferred to the pond. To
-accomplish this, I made a sort of basket of wire-netting to hang over
-the side of the boat and keep the fish in, but it proved a failure, and
-I eventually purchased a little punt about six feet long, which had
-been built for a boy, but was too cranky to be used with any degree
-of safety. In this punt, fitted with a removable canvas cover, and
-filled with water, the captured fish were deposited, towed home, and
-transferred to the pond, where they soon appeared to be perfectly at
-home.
-
-About this time I obtained the services of an able-bodied lad of some
-seventeen years, who understood farm work and a little carpentering.
-He used to fish for me at times, and caught so many fish that I tried
-sending fresh fish down to Auckland for sale there. The journey
-occupied, however, the greater part of two days, though the distance
-is under a hundred miles, and the fish did not arrive in town in good
-condition. If packed in ice, they would of course have kept perfectly
-fresh, as they were alive when sent from Matakohe; but I had no
-ice-making machine, and therefore was obliged to give the matter up.
-
-I feel confident, however, that the fishery here only wants capital to
-develop it, to become one of the great industries of the North Kaipara.
-Its land-locked waters swarm with the finny tribe, and can be fished
-with impunity in any weather. Fish is by no means a cheap commodity in
-Auckland; but the population being small, the market there would soon
-be glutted. Sydney, Melbourne, and the other Australian ports, however,
-present a grand field for the disposal of the fisherman's spoils,
-and were fish sent away alive from here packed in ice, frozen by the
-Freezing Company in Auckland, and transported from there to Australia
-in ships provided with freezing chambers, I cannot help believing an
-immense trade would be done.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-Sketch of Schnapper.
-
-Skull of Schnapper.]
-
-I have seen in the newspaper the price of fish called schnapper, quoted
-in the Sydney market at from thirty-six shillings to eighty-four
-shillings per dozen. These fish can be caught line-fishing in the
-Kaipara, at the rate of sixty or seventy an hour per line of two hooks,
-and of an average weight of about 9 lbs. each. The schnapper fisherman
-files the barbs off his hooks, that they may readily be extracted
-from the fishes' mouths; he also ties the bait securely on; and thus
-prepared, can haul the fish in as fast as he likes. The schnapper
-has most powerful teeth and jaws, and lives principally on cockles
-and mussels, the shells of which it crushes in its mouth without
-difficulty. It will, however, take almost any sort of bait, and is by
-no means a fastidious eater. The Kaipara waters swarm also with several
-other varieties of fish.
-
-[Illustration: Sketch of Lower Jaw of Schnapper, showing double row of
-teeth. (About half size.)]
-
-_Mullet_, resembling in appearance the grey mullet of the old country,
-but far richer and superior in flavour, are very plentiful during the
-summer months. These fish and schnapper are most delicious when salted
-and smoked, and may be said to fill the place of the English herring
-and haddock. Mullet average about 2 lbs. each in weight, and I have
-known one hundred and twenty dozen of them to be netted by two men in a
-day up here.
-
-_Patiki_, a fish shaped exactly as the English flounder, but resembling
-more nearly in flavour the sole, are here in great numbers, and can be
-caught with a net in boat loads.
-
-The _Kahawai_, weighing on the average 5 or 6 lbs., and modelled very
-much like the salmon, though finer in the tail, and with spotted sides.
-The resemblance unfortunately ends with the shape, for its flesh is dry
-and not over palatable. It lives principally on young mullet and Patiki.
-
-The _yellow tail_, a sort of sea bream; a fish called locally the _king
-fish_, closely resembling in shape, fins, colour, and scales the fresh
-water tench; the _dog fish_, _eels_, and a small fish with a long snout
-called the _pipe fish_, complete the list, with the exception of the
-_shark_, and a fish called the _Stingarie_, doubtless a corruption of
-Stinging Ray. This fish--in form somewhat like the skate, with the
-exception that it has a long tail--attains a weight, at times, of about
-a quarter of a ton, and possesses a most formidable sting, armed with
-sharp-pointed barbs, and from six to eight inches in length, and about
-half an inch in width. This sting is situated at the root of the tail,
-and lies flat along it. When the fish makes an attack, it elevates its
-sting, and runs backwards with great speed at the object of its wrath.
-The Stingarie is of a discreet nature, however, and will never make
-an attack, unless driven to it. Its principal food, like the Kahawai,
-consists of mullet and Patiki.
-
-Oysters and other bivalves, including Pipis (cockles) and escalops,
-also abound in the Kaipara. The rough corrugated shelled rock oyster,
-spoken of in my second chapter, are very abundant in places; and there
-is another kind, a smooth shelled oyster, very like the English native,
-which locates itself in deep water, and therefore is seldom met with.
-
-Escalops, I think, must be plentiful, if one may judge by the number
-of escalop shells thrown up on the beaches near deep water. To procure
-these delicacies a dredge would be necessary, and dredges for shell
-fish are as yet unknown in the Kaipara, neither has the trawl net
-ever been tried, so it is impossible to say what unknown piscatorial
-treasures may yet lie hidden in the unexplored depths of the waters of
-our inland sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-_GODWIT SHOOTING._
-
-
-Whatever accusations of remissness and lack of zeal and energy may be
-brought against the New Zealand Government, no one can assert with
-any degree of truth, that the surveys of this part of the country are
-neglected by them. Before one surveyor's pegs have had time to commence
-to decay, and the lines cut, become grown up with tea-tree scrub, a new
-survey is ordered, new pegs are put in, and lines fresh cut. I am told
-that the cost of these repeated surveys sometimes exceeds the value of
-the land surveyed, and without for a moment supposing that they are
-unnecessary or useless, one cannot help thinking that the money spent
-in resurveying outlying and comparatively uninhabited districts, would
-be more judiciously expended in making good roads in those places that
-are already settled.
-
-There have been two surveys at Matakohe over the same ground--or at
-any rate in a great measure over the same ground--during the four
-years I have lived there. One of the most efficient surveyors on the
-Government staff, Mr. J----, was with his party, at this time encamped
-on the outskirts of Matakohe, and he and his assistant, Mr. de C----,
-called on me, and an acquaintance sprang up which greatly helped to
-lessen the dulness of our country life.
-
-Mr. J---- was fond of shooting, and whenever a day could be spared,
-we went out together with our guns. When I first became friendly with
-him--in April--pheasant shooting had not commenced, so we confined our
-attention to the wild fowl, the season for which had already opened,
-in consequence of the breeding time having been unusually early. The
-Acclimatisation Society has the power to alter the shooting season as
-it deems advisable, but the season for both native and imported game,
-usually extends from the 1st of May to the end of July. We enjoyed two
-or three good days' sport together, but the best I have ever had up
-here, was towards the end of April.
-
-On this particular day, Mr. J---- rode in by appointment to have some
-godwit shooting, and as soon as the incoming tide reached my landing
-wharf, we embarked in my punt with our dogs, guns, luncheon, &c., in
-order to have some shooting before the flats became covered. I took
-with us one of my boys, a capital hand with the sculls, and his duty
-was to paddle the punt as quietly as possible, when we were coming up
-to birds, while my friend and myself placed ourselves as well as we
-could out of sight.
-
-We first steered for a point about a quarter of a mile off, on which
-we could distinguish birds of some description. Mangrove grew in the
-shallow water off this point, and these I was careful to make use
-of, as a screen, as long as possible. As we neared the last one, I
-handed my boy the sculls, and crouched down in the stem, while Mr.
-J---- followed my example in the stern. Presently the last shelter was
-passed, and we came in full sight and range of a large flock of godwit.
-Up they rose to seek safety in flight, but the music of our guns rang
-out, feathers flew in all directions, and the dogs had their work cut
-out for some time. We dropped fifteen and a half brace with the three
-shots we got in; and when they were all bagged, we hoisted the sail, as
-a nice breeze was blowing, and shaped our course for a point called the
-Tent Rock, where I knew godwit, red-shanked plover, and other birds
-loved to congregate.
-
-When within about a quarter of a mile, the sail was lowered, my boy
-again took the sculls, and Mr. J---- and myself laid up in the punt.
-In spite, however, of all our precautions, we only secured there a
-brace of red-shanked plover, a black duck, and a couple of New Zealand
-sandpipers. We now sailed away with a leading breeze for an island
-lying about three miles distant, which is only covered at high water,
-adding a couple of duck and a brace and a half of red-shanked plover to
-our bag on the way. On the island we had some grand sport, as the tide
-was by this time over all the flats, and the birds did not like leaving
-the only feeding place remaining to them.
-
-After bagging nine or ten brace of godwit and plover we turned for
-home, quite satisfied with our day's shooting, and anxious to fetch my
-place before the tide had receded from the beach. This we succeeded
-in doing, and had barely reached the house with our load of birds
-when rain began to fall, and was soon descending in torrents. As the
-next day was Sunday, and of course a day of rest for the surveyors,
-we easily persuaded Mr. J---- to sleep at our house. All the evening
-and through the night the downpour continued, and on Sunday morning,
-when it was still raining hard, Mr. J---- told me he felt rather
-anxious about his men, as they were encamped close to a stream in a
-valley, with high hills on either side. His anxiety turned out to
-be well founded, for on that Saturday night, as Mr. de C----, the
-assistant-surveyor, and the three men were fast asleep, the stream
-overflowed its bank, and the water gradually rising at last washed
-their tents away, and they awoke to find the flood level with their
-beds, and a bitterly cold rain pelting down on them.
-
-A surveyor's camp bed is constructed usually as follows:--
-
-Four tea-tree stakes for legs are driven well in the ground, and cut
-off at a convenient height above it. A couple of sacks with holes cut
-in each corner of the bottom are then stretched on two six foot stakes
-passed through the holes, and these stakes are nailed securely on the
-top of those driven in the ground, thus forming the bed, on which is
-laid either dried ferns or Mongi-mongi as a mattress. The tents that
-were washed away were recovered uninjured, and beyond the loss of a tin
-pot or two, and the wetting of some boots and clothes, no great damage
-was done, as Mr. J---- had luckily planted his tent, containing the
-instruments, maps, &c., on high ground beyond the reach of flood.
-
-Being flooded out, I am told, is by no means an uncommon occurrence
-in the lives of Zealand Government surveyors. Compelled to camp near
-running water, as of course they cannot spare the time to sink wells,
-and have no water tanks, sudden floods often overtake even the most
-wary. Indeed, being flooded out, working up to the knees in mud
-and water, swimming rivers, climbing almost impossible mountains,
-subsisting on the pith of the Nikau palm when provisions run out and
-cannot be renewed, rheumatic pains, fevers and agues, may be all said
-to fall within the usual experience of the New Zealand Government
-surveyor, and to become qualified to enjoy these experiences a special
-training is required, and a stiff examination has to be passed. There
-is no guarantee of the permanency of the appointment, and no retiring
-pensions are granted.
-
-A young man may waste several of the best years of his life studying
-for the post of Government surveyor, which he may obtain only to be
-dispossessed of on the plea of retrenchment. The colony being so
-young, presents few openings for educated men to make a start in life.
-I sincerely trust, however, it will have something more promising to
-offer the rising generation when their time comes to go forth into the
-world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-_THE KAURI GUMDIGGER._
-
-
-I am going to commence this chapter by confessing that I find myself
-in a difficulty. All my endeavours to secure an appointment had proved
-abortive. I am anxious to stick to fact, and at the same time to
-interest my reader, but how can it be done, if I simply relate the
-details of my humdrum life as a country settler!
-
-Three or four chapters back, I rushed off from my narrative into the
-New Zealand forests, and then apologised, but I can't keep perpetually
-apologising, and to prevent the reader from closing my book in disgust,
-I must ask him to hold me excused if I frequently bolt off the even
-course of my clodhoppery existence into subjects which are more
-interesting.
-
-I have already briefly described one of North Auckland's greatest
-industries--the Kauri timber trade--an industry, alas! of destruction,
-and one whose days are numbered. There is another great industry
-which also owes its existence to the Kauri, both of the present and of
-bygones times. I mean the Kauri gum trade. This being the land of the
-glorious Kauri pine for all ages, of course forms the "Tom Tiddler's"
-ground of the happy-go-lucky gumdiggers, of whom there are at the
-present time over ten thousand in the North Auckland district. About
-£350,000 worth of Kauri gum was exported last year from the province
-of Auckland, principally to London and America. It is used largely in
-the manufacture of varnish and lacquers, and as there are no varnish
-manufactories of any importance in New Zealand, all the gum is sent
-away.
-
-The three principal exports of the province of Auckland are Kauri
-gum, gold, and timber, and the export value of the former is greater
-than the combined values of the gold and timber. The gumdigger
-therefore plays a most important part in the province of Auckland, as
-without his assistance its export trade would look very shady, yet
-he is universally looked down upon by the sober-sided settler, who
-hardly ever has a good word for him. "He's only a gumdigger," is an
-expression I have commonly heard used, to imply that the individual
-indicated was a person of no importance.
-
-The title "Gumdigger" itself may have something to do with the matter.
-It is not a nice word, and looks too much like "Gravedigger" at first
-sight. Possibly, too, the sedate settler may not think digging gum
-so intellectual and high-toned an employment as digging potatoes,
-fattening pigs, and the other duties which fall to his lot; again,
-the gumdigger proper is not a landowner; and yet again, he is often
-addicted to what he terms "going on the spree," and when he has changed
-his gum into money, to changing the money into strong waters. All these
-causes, I think, conspire together to lower him in the eyes of the
-extremely respectable, but ofttimes narrow-minded settler.
-
-I have not the slightest wish to endeavour to defend the gumdigger
-for the intemperance and careless waste of money that too generally
-characterises him, but I will say, and say it without fear of
-contradiction, that he is exposed to far greater temptations than ever
-beset the settler. He lives an entirely isolated and a fearfully hard
-life out on the gum-field, and when he comes into a township, which he
-probably does every two or three months, and converts his gum into
-money, the temptation "to go on the spree" is great. He is unmarried,
-and has no particular use for the surplus money after his "tucker" bill
-is paid, and he spends it recklessly. There are savings-banks, it is
-true, but no one calls his attention to the fact that by depositing his
-surplus cash in them it will be making money for him while he is out on
-the gum-field, and the probability is that he does not know of their
-existence. The settler has a hundred improvements to make on his land,
-and has plenty of ways of employing his spare cash. Besides, he is
-generally surrounded by his family, and has not to endure the horrible
-isolation in which most of the gumdiggers' time is spent.
-
-Not all gumdiggers, however, waste their substance. Many when they
-indulge in a holiday, enjoy themselves in a moderate and becoming
-manner. Not long since I was rowing by the Matakohe Wharf, and saw a
-stout, thick-set man, whom I knew to be a gumdigger, fishing off its
-seaward end. His legs were dangling over the edge, his back was resting
-against one of the mooring posts, in his mouth was a short clay, and by
-his side stood a bottle of beer and a tumbler. His face wore a look of
-placid contentment, and he was evidently enjoying himself thoroughly.
-
-[Illustration: A Gumdigger's Holiday.]
-
-Gumdigging is exceptionally hard work, and only a man accustomed to
-manual labour can hope to be successful at it. Some intelligence too
-and power of observation is required, in order that the digger may not
-waste time working in unlikely places. When an old Kauri tree dies and
-falls, its huge roots throw up a mound of earth, and the shape of these
-mounds indicate to an observing digger the direction in which the trees
-have fallen, although all signs of the trees themselves have entirely
-decayed away and disappeared, perhaps thousands of years ago. As the
-gum generally exudes freely from the Kauri, and collects in the forks
-where the trunk commences to throw out branches, by stepping sixty or
-seventy feet from the mound in the right direction, and digging there,
-gum will probably be found. The mounds themselves also offer good
-chances, and these are generally first attacked.
-
-A gumdigger's outfit is not an expensive one. It consists of a spade, a
-gum spear, and a piece of sacking made into a bag and strapped on his
-back with pieces of flax.
-
-The gum spear is a four-sided rod of steel, about four feet long,
-and pointed at one end. It looks very like a fencing foil, with a
-handle like a spade stuck in the end of it, instead of a hilt. If the
-field is a new one, or has been but little worked, this instrument
-is brought into use, and with it the gumdigger probes the ground in
-different directions, until he strikes a piece of gum, which, if at
-all experienced, he can tell at once from a stone, root, or other
-substance. He then digs it up, puts it in the bag, and recommences
-spearing. An old observing hand generally does a good deal less
-spearing than a new chum, but a good deal more putting in the bag. When
-a field has been dug over two or three times, as most of them have been
-now, the big lumps have nearly all been removed, and the method then
-adopted is to dig in the most likely places, on the chance of turning
-up gum with the earth. Here the observing digger again gets the pull,
-for instead of digging a patch right out as many do, he digs a spitful
-here and a spitful there, and generally manages to turn up gum.
-
-My theory is, that by minutely examining the places where gum is turned
-up, and comparing it with the surrounding ground, the wide-awake
-ones have discovered something or other--I don't in the least know
-what--which indicates to them the most likely places to dig. Anyway, it
-is a fact that some gumdiggers earn their two and three pounds a week,
-while others working equally hard, if not harder, in the field, can
-scarcely pay their "tucker" bill.
-
-[Illustration: Group of Tree-Gummers under Kauri.]
-
-[Illustration: Gum Scraping.]
-
-After the gum has been dug up, it has to be scraped, and this is
-generally done by the gumdigger before he offers it for sale. If an
-industrious man, his evenings are usually spent at this tedious work;
-and the more successful his day's digging, the more scraping lies
-before him in the evening, and it is considered a good ten hours' work
-to scrape a hundredweight of gum. When it is thoroughly scraped, it is
-easy to see the quality, and it is then sorted into boxes. The rarest
-kind is quite transparent and resembles lumps of glass; the next in
-order, is cloudy in places, yellowish looking, and very like amber,
-though much more brittle; some again is all cloudy, and the commonest
-sort of all is almost opaque. The clearer it is the higher its value,
-and the price for the first class, which is used in the manufacture of
-copal varnishes, ranges from about £70 to £80 a ton, according as the
-market is over or under stocked.
-
-[Illustration: Gum Scraper's Knife, constructed so that blade can be
-replaced when worn out.]
-
-Very pretty ornaments can be cut with a pen-knife out of Kauri gum,
-the surface of which may be afterwards easily polished by being
-rubbed with a piece of flannel soaked in kerosine oil. In most of the
-gumdiggers' huts (or whares, as they are called), and in settlers'
-houses in gumdigging districts, are to be found specimens of amateur
-gum-carving, among which, hearts are by far the most popular subject.
-I have seen flat hearts with sharp edges, rounded hearts, lob-sided
-hearts, elongated hearts, and many other varieties of Kauri gum hearts,
-which, though doubtless greatly admired by the personal friends of
-the carvers, could not be said to possess any commercial value. The
-material is too fragile for elaborate and artistic designs to be
-attempted, and no trade of any extent in Kauri gum carvings is pushed
-in the colony.
-
-All the gum dug out of the gum-fields of course belonged to Kauri trees
-of bygone ages, and is sometimes called fossil gum. From the living
-Kauri, however, gum is constantly exuding, and forming in large lumps
-in the forks of the branches. To secure this it is necessary to climb
-the tree; but the barrel being of such huge dimensions, and rising
-like a pillar for sixty or seventy feet, it cannot be climbed in the
-ordinary manner. The plan generally adopted, therefore, is to tie a
-small weight to a long piece of strong twine or fishing-line, and throw
-the weight over the branches; the end of the thread held below is then
-slacked out until the weight is lowered within reach, when a rope is
-tied to the line, and hauled up over the branch and down again the
-other side. Climbing this rope, the gum-seeker gains a footing on the
-branch, and with a tomahawk, hacks out the gum and lets it fall to the
-ground. I have heard of another method of climbing by means of steps
-cut with a tomahawk in the barrel of a Kauri, but have never seen it
-done, and should think it an exceedingly dangerous operation. Climbing
-for gum in the ordinary way with a rope is dangerous work enough, and
-very often men meet their death when engaged in the occupation. Only a
-few weeks back the dead body of a native was found in the bush about
-four miles from here, lying at the foot of a Kauri, the rope dangling
-from a branch overhead, clearly indicating the manner of his death.
-Tree gum is not so valuable as the ordinary gum found in the ground,
-but it can be obtained in much larger lumps, and a good tree climber
-can make on the average between three and four pounds a week.
-
-[Illustration: Climbing Kauri for Gum.]
-
-The Kauri gum industry cannot be considered as an unmixed blessing to
-the province of Auckland, inasmuch as it materially helps to keep up
-the price of labour. If a man cannot get the wages he wants, away he
-goes to the gum-fields, and although he probably only makes enough to
-just keep himself alive, still he is his own master, and is always
-looking forward to doing better. The life he leads when gumdigging is a
-fearfully lonely one, and he would really be far happier and far better
-off, if he were working regularly for moderate wages at some factory,
-with mates around him, and a comfortable cottage to spend his evenings
-in, when his day's work is over.
-
-The North New Zealand working-man cannot see this at present, however,
-and until he is forced to see it, the natural industries of the
-province of Auckland can never be developed.
-
-Take, for instance, the varnish-making industry. Although New Zealand
-is the only country in the whole world which produces Kauri gum--one of
-the most important ingredients in varnish--yet it is all sent away in
-its crude state, for other countries to derive the benefits and profits
-consequent on its manufacture into varnish.
-
-Before closing the chapter, I must say a word concerning the honesty
-of gumdiggers. Within a radius of twenty miles from here, there are
-several hundred men engaged in the occupation, and within that same
-radius we only possess two rural policemen. In spite of this feeble
-protection, however, I have never during my residence in the district,
-heard of a robbery being committed by a gumdigger, although many
-scarcely earn enough to keep themselves alive.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-_A STORY OF A BUSHRANGER._
-
-
-We are indeed very seldom troubled in the North Kaipara district with
-thieves or burglars. No one ever thinks of bolting a door, nor do
-people hesitate to vacate their habitations for two or three days,
-leaving them entirely tenantless and unguarded. There are no wolves
-among us; we are all lambs (I was going to say sheep, but I won't).
-
-This was the state of things, until a sort of amateur bushranger
-started business in the district, about eighteen months ago, and
-upset all our feelings of security. He was not a gumdigger, however,
-but a labourer employed by a gentleman sheep farming in Matakohe. As
-correspondent for the _Auckland Weekly News_, I sent the Editor the
-following account concerning his little enterprise:--
-
- "A NORTH KAIPARA BUSHRANGER.
-
- "An individual has for some time past been wandering about the
- different settlements here, whose doings do not at all meet with the
- approval of the inhabitants. He has contracted an unpleasant habit
- of visiting houses at the witching hour of midnight, and extracting
- from the larders whatever comestibles he finds to his taste. His
- penchant for sweetmeats of all kinds is remarkable. He would risk
- his liberty for a bottle of lollies, while the sight of a jam tart
- would draw him through a plate-glass window. This gentleman rejoices
- in many names, Sullivan being the one he at present patronises. Last
- week he visited Paparoa and Maungaturoto, and regaled himself at
- several establishments. On Saturday he called at Mr. D.'s. store,
- Maungaturoto, the owner being engaged elsewhere. Sullivan, unwilling
- to disturb him, broke open the door, and captured a bottle of prime
- bulls'-eyes and some other articles. He next made a short stay at the
- Doctor's, but what he secured there I have not heard. Some time last
- week he honoured Mr. B. of Paparoa with a visit, took all the loose
- cash he could find, a jar full of sweet jelly, and a batch of bread,
- leaving a stale loaf in its place. Finding that creeping through
- windows, hiding in holes, and sleeping in the tea-tree scrub had had
- a very deteriorating effect on his clothes, he applied to Mr. H.'s
- store, Pahi, during the proprietor's absence, and selecting a suit to
- his satisfaction, left without a word. Last Sunday he was reported to
- have reached Matakohe, and probably his presence will be felt by some
- of the settlers before long. Naturally, his movements have excited,
- and still excite, a good deal of notice and criticism, and a few
- weeks back some settlers, taking an unfavourable view of his peculiar
- free-and-easy mode of existence, applied to a local constable to come
- and put a stop to his little game. In due course this functionary
- arrived, and a sigh of relief went through the several settlements--an
- arm of the law was with us, and confidence was restored.
-
- "The energy displayed by this officer was indeed most reassuring.
- No sooner did he hear of a settler's house having been entered the
- previous night, than he was off at once to the place. No sooner did
- the news reach him of another depredation being committed elsewhere,
- than away he went again, and at last succeeded in capturing--not the
- man--but some mementoes of his travels. The story goes, that he very
- nearly captured the man himself, and would have done so, if the man,
- who is very powerfully built, had not unfortunately captured him
- instead. It was in this way. Having sighted his proposed captive, our
- energetic and plucky local official immediately gave chase, and was
- evidently gaining ground, when the pursued suddenly crouched down in
- some tea-tree scrub. 'Now I have him,' thought the exulting rural
- representative of the law, and in another instant he was on the back,
- and his hand was on the collar, of the larder-breaking Sullivan,
- while in a voice of thunder he shouted, 'I arrest you in the name
- of the law.' Had the midnight prowler any sense of decency and the
- fitness of things, now was the time to show it by resigning himself
- quietly to his fate and the majesty of the law. But no! the bump of
- reverence must indeed be wanting in the cranium of this sweet-toothed
- bushranger, for instead of thus comporting himself, he actually (so
- runs the tale) passed his hand over the constable's shoulder, grasped
- his coat collar, and raising himself from is stooping posture, marched
- off with the highly indignant officer kicking and struggling on his
- back. On arriving at a creek, he shot the representative of the law
- over his shoulder into the water like a sack of coals, and retired
- into the bush to suck lollipops. After this episode our rural
- official returned to his home (eighteen miles away) to consider what
- was best to be done, leaving word, however, at Paparoa that should
- the knight of the jam tarts and bulls'-eyes be seen anywhere, he was
- to be detained until our rural official could come over to arrest
- him. Mr. Sullivan has made his presence felt several times since, but
- there always seems to be a difficulty about inducing him to remain in
- any one place sufficiently long to call in the services of our rural
- officer. Another rural officer from the Wairoa has now come forward,
- and is at present at Maungaturoto, while Sullivan is here. By the
- time the rural officer arrives here, the wily Sullivan will probably
- be at Pahi. If he could only be induced to partake of some carefully
- doctored jam tart, I think the rural officer would be more evenly
- handicapped. As it is, unless our volatile visitor gets a sunstroke,
- or accidentally chokes himself with a bull's eye, I fear a good many
- more larders will be emptied and a good many more jam tarts reported
- missing before he is safely placed under lock and key in Mount Eden
- Jail."
-
-This lollipop-sucking bushranger for several weeks completely baffled
-all efforts to arrest him, and pursued with impunity his meteoric
-course, leaving behind him a well-defined train composed of jam tins,
-lolly bottles, pie dishes, infuriated settlers, and rural policemen.
-He was finally captured near Helensville, about sixty miles from here,
-and in due course brought before the magistrates at Pahi, who committed
-him for trial. I rode over to be present at the hearing of the case,
-and in returning after dark, my horse shied, the saddle, too loosely
-girthed, slipped round, and I was thrown, the result being concussion
-of the brain. An acquaintance, a Paparoa settler, got me home somehow
-or other, and for three days my mind was wandering, during which time
-my poor wife had to attend to me entirely unaided, as on the very day
-of my accident she had dismissed our servant girl for dishonesty. The
-principal storekeeper in Matakohe kindly came at once, offered his
-services, and telegraphed for the doctor, who unfortunately was engaged
-attending a serious case at a distance. When he did arrive he said my
-wife had done everything he could have done, and that I was going on
-all right. It was months, however, before I could get about again,
-and neither my wife nor myself are likely to easily forget the North
-Kaipara bushranger, now safely installed in Mount Eden Jail, and about
-half way through the term of three years' imprisonment with hard labour
-to which he was sentenced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-_SPORTS._
-
-
-A grand opportunity for an energetic bushranger might be found on the
-Pahi regatta and sports day, generally held in January. Then every
-one, masters, mistresses, children, and servants turn out, and leave
-houses and their contents to look after themselves. It is one of the
-chief events we look forward to in our uneventful lives up here, and a
-most sociable and enjoyable day is always spent, for every one seems
-light-hearted and happy on a Pahi sports day. Luncheon parties are
-given on board cutters, owned by neighbouring settlers, and moored so
-as to command a good view of the races; picnic parties are held on the
-bright shelly beach, while the settlers who live in the township itself
-keep open house.
-
-Our punt usually conveys us to the scene of gaiety, distant about four
-miles by water, though over twelve by land. It was on our first visit
-on a regatta day that I became acquainted with a singular colonial
-institution known by the name of "planting." My introduction came about
-in this way. I had not long disembarked my wife and children at the
-township, after a somewhat boisterous trip, when a gentleman whose
-acquaintance I had lately made came up, and after shaking hands with
-us all, whispered mysteriously in my ear that he had a plant near,
-and wished me to come with him. Having secured seats for my party,
-I followed, wondering what sort of plant it could possibly be that
-required mentioning in such strangely subdued tones. My conductor soon
-came to a clump of tea tree, where, stooping down, he commenced groping
-about among the undergrowth, and at last produced a bottle containing
-some liquid, which I shortly after discovered to be brandy and water.
-What a curious plant! and in what a curious position to find it! The
-tea tree (symbolical of blue ribbonism) protecting and sheltering the
-deadly brandy and water plant. Here is food for reflection indeed,
-but let it pass! There were plants (of the class alcoholic) in all
-directions that day, from the humble beer to the haughty three star
-brandy plant.
-
-An hotel has since been opened in Pahi, and there is now no necessity
-for planting, though the system--which will doubtless strike with
-horror some of my readers--is still in vogue in most country districts
-on the occasion of any public gathering. In common justice, I am bound
-to say that I saw no one on that day at Pahi the slightest degree the
-worse for the peculiar gardening operations; in fact, unless like a
-bee gathering honey from flower to flower, some thirsty soul had made
-a round of the plants, which he could only do on receiving a general
-invitation from the proprietors, they were harmless enough, and the
-system must be regarded simply as a method adopted by colonials to show
-good fellowship.
-
-To return to the regatta. Three or four hundred persons were by
-this time assembled. My wife had joined, by invitation, a party of
-ladies--the wives of some of Mr. Hay's heroes in "Brighter Britain"--on
-board one of the moored yachts, and I leave her deeply engaged in that
-enjoyment so dear to most ladies--a good gossip--and stroll on to the
-wharf to see the cutter race started. After some little delay, and a
-good deal of shouting, the seven boats entered for the contest are
-in position, the gun is fired from the umpire's boat for the start,
-and they all become suddenly covered with canvas, and are off. It is
-blowing half a gale--but what care they. Up go their gaff topsails, and
-the boats careen over until you can almost see their keels. Most of
-them carry extra hands for ballast, and this live ballast hangs itself
-over the windward rail. Away they go, till they look like toy yachts
-in the distance. Now they round the buoy, and beat up for home. One
-boat misses stays and goes ashore, another carries away her topmast,
-and a third springs her bowsprit and gives in. But nobody seems to
-mind--every one appears happy--owners of the damaged crafts and all.
-On the wharf, which is crowded, a little mild betting goes on, and a
-gentleman (an old Etonian) gets up a shilling sweepstake in his hat.
-Bang goes the gun, as the first boat passes the winning post. Bang
-again, and the second boat is in. Then a voice whispers in my ear,
-"Come along, I've got a plant;" and I retire with the whisperer, and
-have a glass of ale.
-
-While the cutter race is progressing a rowing match is started, and
-then a punt race is rowed, followed by another sailing race for open
-boats, a Maori race, and a model yacht race. After all the boat events
-have been run off, walking a greasy boom fixed out from the end of
-the wharf is indulged in; and after that the landsmen have a turn, and
-a move is made for the greensward, which reaches down to the beach.
-Here are erected hurdles for horse-jumping, in which several Maoris
-(who are great at sports) are competitors; next comes pole leaping,
-long jumping, foot races, &c.; and the sports conclude with an obstacle
-race, in which the competitors have to crawl through bottomless tubs,
-and overcome all sorts of carefully devised impediments to their
-passage. A concert and dance in the public hall conclude a most
-enjoyable day's amusement. At its conclusion, horses are saddled, boats
-and punts got ready, and the assembly melts away, leaving the pretty
-township of Pahi bathed in the glorious light of the full moon, which
-here and there shines brightly on the sapless remains of the now no
-longer regarded colonial alcoholic plants.
-
-Another great break in our monotony up here is the Matakohe Annual
-Race Meeting, in connection with which I at present hold the position
-of Hon. Secretary and Treasurer. At our last meeting, held in March,
-about four hundred persons assembled on the racecourse, and a capital
-day's sport was enjoyed. We had a grand stand capable of seating three
-hundred, refreshment booths, saddling paddock, weighing room, a tent
-for the Secretary, and a Judge's box. The jockeys all rode in colours,
-and the scene was altogether a very brilliant and enlivening one. The
-following events were run off during the day:--
-
-The Maiden Plate, over a mile and a half course. Nine horses started,
-and winner received seven pounds.
-
-Settlers' Race Handicap. Two miles course. Six started, and winner
-received seven pounds.
-
-Handicap Hurdle Race. Two miles course, with eight sets of three feet
-six inch hurdles. Four started, and winner received eight pounds ten
-shillings, and second horse one pound five shillings.
-
-Hack Hurdles, over a mile and a half course and six flights of hurdles.
-Five started, and winner received five pounds.
-
-Maori Race, over a mile and a half course. Only three horses started,
-and winner received five pounds.
-
-_Matakohe Cup Handicap._ Two miles. Seven started. Winner received
-thirteen pounds ten shillings, and second horse one pound ten
-shillings.
-
-A Trotting Race, Pony Race, and Consolation Handicap, the winners
-carrying off between them twelve pounds, completed the events of the
-day.
-
-Order was sustained by half the police force in the whole district,
-consisting of one constable of portly dimensions, backed by an
-imposing uniform and a shako. The money for the prizes was supplied
-by the takings at the gates, the nomination and acceptance fees, and
-the subscriptions of the members of the Club. There was no betting
-beyond a few shilling sweepstakes got up in the old Etonian's hat. No
-drunkenness disturbed the harmony of the day, or the equanimity of
-our stalwart protector. Legitimate sport, and nothing else, called us
-together, and legitimate sport we enjoyed to our hearts' content.
-
-I am confident that great good results from such gatherings as the
-two I have described--the Pahi Regatta and the Matakohe Races. In the
-former, several of the competing cutters and boats, and all the punts,
-are locally built, and wholesome rivalry is excited among the builders,
-tending to improve the class of boat turned out by them. In the case of
-the races, the tendency is to improve the breed of horses, and to study
-more closely the most important animal in the colony.
-
-These social gatherings also do good in another way, by bringing
-about a general hand-shaking and wiping out for a time of the petty
-jealousies and the miserable little bickerings and quarrels that too
-often exist among a certain class in these little settlements. Among
-such people the slightest thing is sufficient to cause a break in
-friendship. If Jones does not vote the same way as Brown, smash goes
-their acquaintance; if Robinson afterwards asks the discarded Jones to
-spend the evening, he is cut dead by Brown immediately; and if Mrs.
-Robinson appears in chapel with a more gaudy bonnet than Mrs. Jones
-possesses, the demon jealousy is at once aroused, and a coolness takes
-place between the two families.
-
-The most active agent, however, in producing discord among the settlers
-is the law relating to straying cattle. As it at present stands, no
-compensation can be obtained for damage done by straying cattle unless
-the land trespassed on is enclosed by what is termed "a legal fence,"
-which must be of a certain height and of certain forms of construction.
-A summons may certainly be taken out for trespass, and the owner of
-the cattle fined one shilling per head, but to do this involves a great
-loss of time, and is very little satisfaction.
-
-The result of this law is that the man who has good feed on his land
-has to erect fences unnecessarily strong for the restraint of his own
-cattle, in order to keep out his neighbour's wandering animals. It
-certainly causes cattle to be very cheap, but at the same time does
-great injury to the legitimate farmer, who will not take advantage of
-this miserable piece of legislation, and who keeps his paddocks in good
-grass, and his beasts in proper restraint. Many settlers systematically
-breed calves, which, when about three months old, they brand with their
-initials, and turn out on the roads to get their living as best they
-may, knowing that if they do break into a neighbour's paddock, the
-chances are that they can show he has not a legal fence.
-
-Surely it would be more just if the law made it compulsory for a man
-to fence sufficiently to keep his own cattle in, and not oblige him
-to fence to keep other people's out. Suppose twelve men take up land
-near together, only one of whom owns cattle, while the others crop and
-grow fruit trees, does it not seem grossly unjust that, in order to
-place themselves in a position to obtain damages, the eleven should
-be obliged to erect legal fences round their properties to keep out
-the twelfth man's cattle? Yet this is the law as it stands at present
-in New Zealand, and any change in it would probably meet with a great
-amount of opposition. We pay dearly enough for our laws out here,
-however, and the motto of all law-makers should be _Fiat justitia ruat
-cœlum_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-_SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT IN NEW ZEALAND._
-
-
-At the end of my last chapter I remarked that we pay dearly enough for
-our laws out here, and I will now try and explain my reasons for so
-thinking. In my humble opinion, we are altogether over-governed, and
-that this is one of the reasons why so many of our enterprises turn
-out commercially unsuccessful, and also why we do not make our own
-varnish, our own furniture, and do not push many other industries, for
-the prosecution of which the colony possesses exceptional advantages.
-We seem to be playing at being a big nation--a second Great Britain in
-fact--while our entire population does not reach the population of one
-of England's first-class towns.
-
-Besides His Excellency the Governor, we have a Premier, styled
-an "Honourable," with a salary of £1750 a year, a ministerial
-residence, travelling and other allowances; six Cabinet ministers
-holding portfolios, receiving each a salary of £1250 a year, a
-ministerial residence, travelling and other allowances, and each
-styled an Honourable; one minister without portfolio, receiving a
-salary of £800 a year; a host of clerks belonging to the different
-ministerial departments, with salaries from £800 a year downwards;
-an attorney-general, solicitor-general, and several law officers;
-a Legislative Council, consisting at present, I believe, of a
-Speaker, a Chairman of Committee, Clerk to the Council, and forty-six
-members--each member being appointed _for life_, and receiving 200
-guineas every Parliamentary session, a free pass on the railways, and
-the title "Hon." tacked on before his name.[A]
-
-[Footnote A: The Legislative Council is supposed to correspond with the
-House of Lords at home, but is called out here by the irreverent, the
-Old Man's Refuge.]
-
-Then we have the House of Representatives, consisting of a Speaker,
-Chairman of Committees, Clerk of Committees, Clerk of the House,
-Sergeant-at-arms, Clerk of Writs, and ninety members. The M.H.R.'s are
-elected for three years, and each receives an honorarium of 200 guineas
-a session, a free pass on the railways, and has M.H.R. tacked on after
-his name.
-
-It is doubtless a very proud and pleasant thing to be able to say we
-have a House of Lords, a Sergeant-at-arms, and all that sort of thing,
-but we are paying too dearly for the gratification.
-
-In England, with an army and navy to support, and a National Debt of
-about seven hundred millions, the general government costs rather under
-fifty shillings per head. Out here, with a public debt of thirty-two
-millions, it costs double, though all we possess in the way of army and
-navy consists of one general, a few volunteers, and a small steamboat
-called the _Hinamoe_ (_i.e._, the sleepy), which, I believe, looks
-after the lighthouses, and carries the "Hons." and the "M.H.R.'s" about
-when they require change of air.
-
-With regard to New Zealand's debt, it may be remarked that the money
-borrowed has not been thrown away on profitless wars, as is often the
-case with Government loans,--and that although I fear a good deal of
-money has been wasted, still there is something better to show than
-soldier's graves and tattered standards. There are telegraph lines,
-harbours, lighthouses, and about sixteen hundred and twenty miles of
-railway, which return at present a net profit of nearly three per
-cent. on their entire cost--over twelve and a half millions--and would
-probably return considerably more were the charges reduced so that
-farmers, orchardists, and others could profitably utilise them as
-carriers. Last year over four millions were expended in governing the
-colony, of which about one million was derived from the gross revenue
-of the railways, and three millions squeezed somehow or other out
-of the colonists. About half this sum of three millions went to pay
-interest on the public debt, and half the cost of government. It is
-with the latter item that our chance of retrenchment at present lies.
-
-The population of the colony last year numbered about 620,000,
-comprised, as nearly as I can ascertain, of 120,000 unmarried men,
-women, widows, and widowers, 100,000 married men, 100,000 married
-women, and 300,000 children. It is clear that the 120,000 unmarried,
-and the 100,000 married men, have between them to pay, directly and
-indirectly, the whole sum necessary for the interest on the loans
-and the cost of government. The married man, with wife and average
-allowance of three children, has of course to contribute a very much
-larger share than the single individual, who has only himself or
-herself to support, and I will assume that the married man pays three
-quarters, and the unmarried one quarter. The former has therefore
-(without counting local rates) to contribute about £22, 10s. annually,
-half of which sum goes to sustain our expensive game of pretending to
-be a big nation.
-
-How can labour be cheap when the above is the case! If the cost of
-government were reduced to one half, the married labouring man (and
-it is he that fixes the rate of wages) could afford to work for
-appreciably less than he now can, the cost of working the railways
-would be diminished, and the revenue from them proportionately
-increased. A sensible reduction in the price of labour would doubtless
-also most beneficially affect the commercial prospects of the colony,
-and probably cause the successful development of its many suitable
-industries.
-
-Mr. Froude, in his book "Oceana," talks about the possibility of New
-Zealand repudiating her debt, and I trust he will not be angry if I say
-that the information given him on this point is about as accurate as
-the information he received concerning Kauri gum, to the effect that it
-was valuable because it made pretty ornaments. There is little fear of
-New Zealand repudiating her debt--as I think the figures I have given
-show--but I trust before long she will repudiate all the unnecessary
-paraphernalia of government that is weighing her down.
-
-The colony may at present, I think, be likened to a goodly fruit tree
-full of bud and promise, but suffering from the ravages of host of
-caterpillars, which are destroying its blossoms, and with them the
-chance of fruit.
-
-A new Government pledged to retrenchment has lately been formed, and I
-trust the promises made on the platform will be fulfilled later on in
-Parliament.
-
-Since writing the above, the following paragraph _referring to the
-late ministry_ appeared among the items of Parliamentary news in the
-_Auckland Evening Star_ of December 6, 1887.
-
- "MINISTERIAL RESIDENCES.
-
- "The following rather questionable items appear in the return of
- expenditure during the last six months on ministerial residences, and
- have created some comment:--
-
- "Tinakori Road House (Sir J. Vogel's): Overhauling lift, £11, 16s.
- 8d.; gas-fittings for theatrical stages, £2, 9s. 11d.; hire of piano,
- tuning and repairing, £10, 4s.; 12 dining-room chairs, at 60s., £36;
- pink and gold breakfast set, £3; one spring lounge, £10; hire of
- piano, £7, 10s.
-
- "Molesworth Street (Hon. E. Richardson's): Re-covering suite in plush,
- £35; knife-cleaning machine, £4, 10s.; hire of piano, £8, 0s. 6d.;
- hire of piano repairing, £3, 5s.; three gas fires, £9; one dinner
- service, £14, 18s.; garden hose and fitting, £4, 1s. 4d.
-
- "Tinakori Road (east) (Hon. J. A. Tole's): One walnut card table,
- £5; two spirit seltzogenes, £5, 2s. 6d.; flower-pots, £1; set best
- hangings, £9; one mangle, £8, 10s.; three pairs curtains, £5, 12s.
- 6d.; one child's bath, £1; packing piano from Christchurch to
- Wellington, £1, 10s.; freight, 9s. 8d."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-_KAIPARA INSECTS._
-
-
-This part of New Zealand, as well as suffering in common with the rest
-of the colony from the ravages of the political caterpillar, is a good
-deal troubled with other insects, and an entomologist would find in
-the Kaipara rare opportunities of prosecuting his studies. Some of the
-specimens are so strange that they cannot fail to strike with their
-peculiarities the most unobserving, and I will venture to describe two
-or three of them.
-
-[Illustration: The Kauri Bug (life size).]
-
-[Illustration: Aweto or Bulrush Caterpillar (two-thirds life size).]
-
-The Kauri bug (called by the Maoris the Kekereru), with its power
-of emitting a terrible and unbearable smell when alarmed, has been
-so often and so fully dealt with by writers, that I shall content
-myself with simply making a sketch of the insect, leaving its smell
-to the imagination of my readers, and will proceed to describe the
-most curious of the New Zealand native insects I have seen, called
-the bulrush caterpillar (_Sphœria Robertsia_)--native name, Aweto.
-This caterpillar becomes changed into a white vegetable substance
-while still retaining its caterpillar shape. It is from three to three
-and a half inches in length, and when about to assume the chrysalis
-form buries itself in the ground, and it is supposed that in doing
-so, some of the minute seeds of a fungus become inserted between the
-scales of its neck; these the insect, being in a sickly condition,
-is unable to rid itself of, and they vegetate and spread through the
-whole of the body, completely filling and changing it entirely into a
-vegetable substance, though retaining exactly the caterpillar form,
-even to the legs, head, mandibles, and claws. From the nape of the
-neck shoots one single stem, which grows to a height of eight or ten
-inches, its apex resembling very closely the club-headed bulrush in
-miniature. This insect plant is generally found growing at the root
-of the Rata tree. It has no leaves, and if the stem by chance becomes
-broken off, another arises in its place, though two stems are never
-found growing simultaneously from one caterpillar. When fresh, the
-vegetable substance of which it is composed is soft, and has a strong
-nutty flavour, and the natives are fond of eating it; they also use it
-burnt and ground to powder as colouring matter for tattooing purposes.
-In every instance the caterpillar is found perfect in shape and size,
-without any sign of contraction or decomposition, and it is therefore
-presumed that the vegetating process takes place during the insect's
-life. A section of the insect vegetable shows distinctly the intestine
-passage.
-
-[Illustration: The Mantis (life size).]
-
-Another curious insect found here is the "Mantis," commonly called,
-on account of its shape, "the ridge-pole rafter." This insect has the
-power of changing its colour like the chameleon. It favours tea-tree
-more than any other plant, and if resting on a withered portion,
-assumes a corresponding brown colour, though when found on the young
-leaves it is a bright green. Its shape is most peculiar, and very
-suggestive of the name given it.
-
-[Illustration: The Weta, Male (two-thirds life size).]
-
-[Illustration: The Weta, Female (two-thirds life size).]
-
-Another insect very commonly found in soft wood tree is called by the
-natives the "Weta," but by vulgar little boys "The Jimmy Nipper." It is
-a most repulsive and formidable-looking insect, with a body sometimes
-two and a half inches long, and is capable of biting hard enough to
-make blood flow freely. The male and female differ considerably in
-shape, the male being provided with an immense pair of jaws. They have
-no wings, and their bodies are covered with a kind of horny shell.
-
-I was engaged felling some dead trees in my bush when I first made the
-acquaintance of these uncanny looking insects, and I then discovered
-two specimens in a hollow tree. A settler, an old soldier, hailing from
-the Emerald Isle, was assisting me, and I asked him what they were
-called.
-
-"Jimmy Nippers to be shure, sur!" he responded; "and by the same token,
-one's a male, and t'other's a faimale."
-
-I inquired if he knew which was which, and he replied--
-
-"Bedad, sur, shure that's aisy to see; look at the power of jaw in that
-one--that's the faimale, sur."
-
-I found out afterwards, however, that he was wrong, and his mode of
-reasoning defective, and, I fear, hardly complimentary to the fair sex.
-
-One of the insects most dreaded by our orchardists is an insect called
-the "Leech," about a third of an inch long, and very like a small slug.
-It sometimes attacks plum and pear trees in thousands, and completely
-denudes them of leaves. Shaking wood ashes over the trees is a very
-effective method of getting rid of these pests.
-
-During some summers a kind of cricket also appears in immense numbers
-and eats the grass, and the bark off the fruit trees. The best remedy
-for these is to keep poultry, which relish them immensely, though the
-crickets in no sense return the compliment, as they give the flesh of
-the fowls a disagreeable bitter taste, and render them for the time
-unfit for the table. The eggs are not affected, however, and corn is
-saved, which is one point gained. Where crickets are undisturbed, they
-destroy all the grass in their neighbourhood, and then turn cannibals
-and eat one another.
-
-We have not, I am happy to say, the dreaded Codlin moth up here,
-although it exists, I believe, in some parts of New Zealand.
-
-Another destructive insect is a little brown beetle, shaped exactly as
-the lady bird. This insect confines its attention to the stalk end of
-the apple, round which it nibbles, until the apple withers and drops
-off. Last year the orchards in the neighbourhood were free from this
-pest, and I hope they have either moved to pastures new, or have been
-exterminated by some of our insect-eating birds.
-
-The spider tribe is very fully represented, some specimens being of
-enormous size. One kind is said to be so dangerous that a bite from it
-endangers life. I have never, however, heard of any one in the Kaipara
-having been bitten.
-
-One other insect, called the Mason bee, I must mention. This fly
-builds a nest of a kind of white mortar, stocks it with small spiders,
-and lives in solitary state. It lays its eggs in the nest, and the
-stored spiders, which are not dead, but appear to have been rendered
-insensible, are for the consumption of its offspring when they hatch
-out. The Mason bee has a very venomous sting, and is altogether an
-undesirable visitor, as it builds its habitation in all sorts of
-untoward places, sometimes even in the locks of doors.
-
-We have numerous other kinds of insects, including a small sort of
-mosquito, a vicious little biting fly called the sandfly, and a locust,
-which, though differing altogether in shape from the ordinary locust of
-the East of Europe, makes exactly the same noise when settled on a tree.
-
-My readers will probably think, from the foregoing alarming list, that
-we are an insect-ridden district altogether, but nature has provided
-us with plenty of help to keep down our pests. We have a beautiful
-little bird called the Blight bird, as small as some humming birds,
-which lives principally on flies and insects, though rather partial
-at times to grapes and figs; we have a bright brown vulture hocked
-bird--about the size of a lark, barred with brown and white on the
-breast, and with a beautiful metallic lustre on its feathers--which
-comes in flocks, and destroys great quantities of the Leech; and we
-have the imported Chinese Pheasant, which helps us greatly in the
-matter of slugs and crickets, though sadly given to rooting up crops
-of maize and potatoes, in consequence of which unfortunate habit it is
-looked upon as a deadly enemy by most of the farmers.
-
-I asked my Hibernian naturalist friend one day how his potatoes were
-getting on. "Bedad, sur," he replied, "Oi niver had a crop come up so
-quickly; sure Oi'd only planted thim one day, and ivery mother's son of
-thim was up the next!"
-
-His field, he afterwards explained, had received a visit from the
-pheasants in force.
-
-In spite, however, of all the wrong-doing laid at the pheasant's door,
-I cannot help thinking it does a great deal more good than harm by
-keeping down slugs, crickets, and other destructive insects. I took
-126 slugs out of the crop of one pheasant, and I have shot many others
-quite as well supplied. They also give us many a day's pleasure, and
-help to keep the larder stocked. With a couple of good dogs and a
-"white man" (as a good fellow is called out here) for a companion, what
-more enjoyable than a day after the long tails. You have to do a good
-deal of tramping for your sport certainly, and you don't generally make
-a big bag, but you never come home empty handed, and feel when your day
-is over that you have thoroughly earned the three or four--or perhaps
-five or six--brace of birds that are hanging up in your safe.
-
-Heavier bags than these are often made, though it has not fallen to my
-lot to make them. Last season a young fellow here grassed fourteen and
-a half brace between sunrise and midday, and bigger bags than that are
-even sometimes recorded, but they involve to my thinking too great an
-expenditure of labour in the way of walking for pleasure.
-
-The full grown cock pheasant in New Zealand weighs from three to three
-and a half pounds, and the hen from two to two and three-quarter
-pounds.
-
-There is one kind of shooting (native pigeon shooting) that may be
-indulged in, without any walking beyond that necessary to reach the
-shooting ground. All you have to do is to seat yourself in the bush
-under a clump of Taraire trees when the berries they bear are ripe, and
-wait for the pigeons to come and feed on them. As soon as the birds are
-settled on the trees, and are busy with the berries, you can blaze away
-as hard as you like, for they won't fly away or move until you bring
-them down. It is unadulterated pot-shooting, and there is not a single
-iota of sport to be got out of it with powder and shot, though with a
-rook rifle there might be some little fun. The Maoris, who are, as a
-rule, bad shots, are very fond of pigeon shooting--they being about the
-only birds they can hit--and I have seen them returning after a day's
-shooting with two or three horse loads of pigeons. The New Zealand
-bird, although looking larger than the English wood quest, rarely
-exceeds a pound and a half in weight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-_A MAORI WEDDING._
-
-
-Bad shots as the Maoris are generally considered, they are nevertheless
-very fond of sport, and are great fellows at horse leaping, running
-matches, and athletic amusements of all kinds. They are a fine,
-intelligent race of people, with plenty of fun and spirit in them, and
-are justly renowned for their hospitality.
-
-About two years ago, the marriage of a daughter of one of the chief
-men belonging to a native village a few miles off took place; and I,
-in common with all the settlers in the neighbourhood, received an
-invitation to be present at the ceremony, and to partake afterwards
-of the wedding breakfast. My wife told me it would be the right thing
-to take some little bridal gift, and gave me a fan to present which
-had a good deal of gold and colour about it. I wrapped it carefully
-in some nice tissue paper, and thus accredited, rode off to the
-festive gathering. During the journey, the paper in which the fan
-was enveloped unfortunately became torn, and finally disappeared, and
-conceiving the impression that a horseman in knee breeches, spurs, and
-fan looked somewhat ridiculous, I was anxious to get rid of my present
-as soon as possible. On drawing near to the village, therefore, great
-was my delight to perceive the bride's father stationed at the entrance
-to receive his guests as they arrived, and I at once made up my mind to
-hand the fan over to him, but to my disappointment found his knowledge
-of English was as limited as mine of Maori, which consisted of one
-word, "Kapai," meaning, It is good.
-
-I endeavoured to illustrate the action of the fan, and held it towards
-him, saying at the same time, "Kapai." He evidently viewed it with
-distrust, and appeared to think it something unholy, or a disguised
-infernal machine. Whenever I held it near him he backed, and every time
-I opened it he jumped. The more I cried "Kapai," the more he shied, and
-we were gradually working our way into the village, my host backing at
-every movement of the fan, and I leading my horse with one hand, and
-with the other manipulating the wretched bridal gift. At last, just
-as I had made up my mind to pitch it away, a Matakohe settler came up
-who could speak Maori, and who soon altered the aspect of affairs. The
-fan was accepted most graciously, and was taken the round of the Maori
-belles, each one of whom, when its action was explained, had a trial of
-it.
-
-[Illustration: He evidently viewed it with distrust.]
-
-This helped to fill up the time, until our Church of England
-clergyman--who was to perform the ceremony--arrived, and we all
-repaired to a structure erected by the Maoris for the occasion,
-and made of Nikau palm leaves plaited together. The inside was very
-tastefully decorated with ferns and cabbage palms, and really did great
-credit to their artistic taste.
-
-An "Ancient and Modern" hymn, in which the natives heartily joined,
-having been sung, the ceremony was performed in Maori, and a second
-hymn closed the service.
-
-The bride and bridegroom then led the way to another construction of
-Nikau leaves, where the wedding breakfast was prepared. The happy
-couple took the head of the table, and the "Pakehas" (_i.e._, the
-white men, literally "strangers"), were invited to first sit down, the
-Maoris waiting on them. The feast was ample, and consisted of wild
-pig, beef, vegetables, and plum pudding. When the Pakeha visitors had
-eaten their fill of the good things, the Maoris had their innings, and
-then the health of the bride and bridegroom, who still retained their
-position at the head of the table, was drunk in Gilbey's Castle A
-Claret, the toast being proposed by our local J.P., and translated by
-an interpreter to the Maoris. The bride's father returned thanks, and
-every one present shook hands with the loving pair and retired. Some
-horse-jumping competitions among the natives brought the afternoon to a
-close, and I returned home very pleased with my day with the Maoris.
-
-Giving place to their Pakeha guests, and seeing them duly satisfied
-before partaking of anything themselves, struck me as showing a very
-keen sense of true hospitality and politeness. They have also, I
-believe, a true appreciation of justice--at least I have often heard
-so, and in the only case which has come under my personal observation,
-the Maori concerned showed it in a marked degree. It occurred in
-connection with the race for horses owned by Maoris, run at our last
-meeting. The jockey of the leading horse--an Englishman--in coming up
-the straight for the post, deliberately pulled right across the second
-horse, thereby nearly causing an accident. A protest was entered by the
-owner of the second horse, and the evidence having been heard by the
-committee, it was unanimously decided to disqualify the leading horse,
-the second was declared winner, and the jockey censured. The leading
-horse could easily have won, and much sympathy was felt for its owner,
-who had lost the race through the bedevilment of his jockey.
-
-When I handed the money to the Maori whose horse was pronounced the
-winner, I explained to him, through an interpreter, that he had won it
-simply through the misbehaviour of the leading jockey, and expressed
-my opinion that it would be fair to divide the sum with the Maori who
-had been so badly treated. He seemed to see the justice of the case at
-once, and without the least hesitation paid over half the money.
-
-Civilisation has done, and is doing, great things for the Maoris.
-Among others it has taught many to drink, to swear in English, and
-to wear English slop clothes, which are quite unsuited to them and
-their habits, and to the use of which, many medical men attribute the
-pulmonary complaints so rife in their midst. They are constantly wading
-through streams, and getting wet through by rain, and they let their
-clothes dry on them (as they were accustomed to do when their skin
-formed the principal part of their garb), and thus sow the germs of
-disease, and hasten the inevitable day when the Maori will have been
-improved off the face of the earth.
-
-No cannibalism exists, I believe, among them at the present time,
-though there are natives living who have indulged in it, and smack
-their lips at the thought. They say white men are too salt to be much
-good for the table, though young Pakeha children they pronounce to be
-"Kapai."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-_SYSTEM OF EDUCATION IN NEW ZEALAND._
-
-
-I must not lay down my pen without saying something about the New
-Zealand educational system, one of the best features in our colonial
-government, though possessing undoubtedly its faults.
-
-The educational course is divided into three grades, viz., the
-elementary or public schools, the secondary or high schools, and
-finally the university. For the two latter, fees have to be paid,
-unless the scholar is clever and lucky enough to obtain a scholarship,
-in which case he or she can go through the whole course without any
-expense to the parents.
-
-In regard to securing a scholarship, however, besides ability
-being necessary on the part of the pupil, a good deal depends on
-the capability of the teacher at the elementary school. This is an
-uncertain element, and constitutes, to my thinking, a flaw in the
-educational system. Teachers at the elementary schools are supposed to
-pass examinations, and receive certificates of competency, but in the
-small up-country districts, teachers are often placed in charge who are
-not certificated, but are what are termed probationers. It is true that
-in each school-district, a committee is elected by the inhabitants,
-whose duty it is to attend to matters connected with the school and
-the teacher, and to report all irregularities to the head school board
-in Auckland. Very often, however, the members of these committees are
-uneducated men, sometimes even being unable to read or write, and it
-may be imagined that they are not held in much awe by the teacher, who
-does in such cases pretty well as he or she likes. Also, as the salary
-of the teacher is regulated by the average number of children attending
-the school, a good competent man naturally objects to a small district,
-and the consequence is, that the children in the country are not so
-well educated as the children in large towns.
-
-This is a serious flaw in the working of the education scheme, but it
-is one that might possibly be overcome by the institution of Government
-boarding-houses in towns like Auckland, where the children of country
-people who cannot afford to pay for private tuition, but who wish their
-little ones to be as well educated as possible, might be lodged at cost
-price by the Government. Another flaw, to my mind, in the system, is
-not allowing the Bible to be read in the schools, the result being that
-many children are allowed to grow up without any knowledge of their
-God or their Saviour, their parents naturally inferring that if it is
-considered unnecessary and unwise to teach Bible truths in the schools,
-there can be no necessity to teach them at home, even if they are able
-to, which in many cases they are not. Freethought and Deism has taken
-strong root in the province of Auckland, and I think the cause may
-probably be traced to the expulsion of the Bible from the New Zealand
-Government schools.
-
-To counteract the evil effects of this blot in our educational system,
-we have our Church of England parsons, our Roman Catholic priests, and
-Wesleyan and Dissenting ministers of various denominations. In this
-district we are very fortunate in our Church of England parson, who
-is not only a gentleman, but is a conscientious and energetic man, as
-well as an agreeable and amusing companion. He has an immense deal
-of riding to get through, as his district is a very extensive one,
-containing about 800 square miles, and in the winter, when some of the
-roads are knee-deep in mud, his experiences must be at times terrible.
-He wears the orthodox dog collar, a clerical cut coat, riding trousers,
-and top-boots with the tops off, and thus accoutred, he travels
-about regardless of the weather, and unremitting in his endeavour to
-counteract evil, in whatever shape or form he meets it. He does not
-always spare himself time even to get his hair cut properly, for not
-long ago I saw him seated on a gentleman's verandah with a sack over
-his shoulders, while his friend, the owner of the house, was shearing
-him with a pair of sheep shears.
-
-While we are thus happily provided with regard to our souls, our bodily
-welfare is not neglected, and our local doctor--a genial son of Erin,
-and a great favourite on all sides--rivals the parson in tending to our
-wants connected with his department. He also has an immense amount of
-riding to do, and is as much at home in the pigskin as some men are in
-their easy chairs. A forty-mile ride to see a patient he regards as a
-little holiday, and pulls up smiling at the finish. He is married, and
-in that respect scores against our parson. He is fond of sport, keeps
-his own hacks, a couple of racers, his double-barrelled central fire,
-and a brace of setters. He sings a good song (hunting ones are his
-favourites), is clever at his profession and attentive to his patients,
-and, in short, is what is known as a good all round man. I think I am
-therefore entitled to say that the North Kaipara settler, both body and
-soul, is in good hands.
-
-The parson and the doctor are the two busiest professional men in
-this part of the world, although the doctor's practice is principally
-confined to accidents and additions to families. The Auckland lawyers
-perhaps have a fairish share of work at times, in connection with North
-Kaiparians, but engineers, to use a colonialism, have not a "show" at
-all--particularly now that the borrowing policy has been partially
-given up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-_A MEETING OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL._
-
-
-About a year ago the Government decided to create a new county, which
-was to be formed of the riding in which I reside, together with seven
-others. With this object eight councillors were elected for the eight
-different ridings. A meeting of these gentlemen took place to carry out
-the intentions of the Government, and to appoint certain officers. This
-was the first meeting of the Council, and I rode over in order to be
-present.
-
-A large hall--at one end of which was a kind of stage--was hired for
-the occasion, and on the stage stood a good-sized table, supplied with
-pens, ink, and paper, and surrounded by eight stout chairs--one for
-each councillor. By one o'clock "the trusted of the people" had all
-arrived and taken their seats with countenances carefully arranged, to
-suit the solemnity of the occasion which had called them together.
-Some interested ratepayers occupied the body of the hall, and watched
-the proceedings of the "trusted ones" with awe and admiration.
-
-The first business to be transacted was the appointment of a chairman.
-Two councillors were proposed for the office, and there were four votes
-for each. Here was a dilemma--a deadlock. What was to be done? A gruff
-voice from among the audience was heard to exclaim, "Toss up for it!"
-a proposition rightly met by a volley of indignant and withering looks
-from the councillors.
-
-After a short pause, a remarkably solemn looking councillor moved that
-the "County Council Act" be consulted, with a view to finding a way out
-of the difficulty. This motion being duly carried, the County's Act was
-produced, and a clause eventually discovered bearing on the matter, and
-which stated that lots were to be drawn by some totally disinterested
-individual. It was naturally felt that it would be extremely
-undignified on the part of a councillor to go and hunt up a suitable
-party. Still somebody must undertake the duty--the two embryo chairmen
-and their supporters could not sit staring blankly at one another all
-day--the county work would never be got through in that fashion, nor
-the county roads ever graded and metalled. At this crisis a gentleman
-among the audience--all honour to him--volunteered to find an eligible
-person, and on his offer being graciously accepted, rushed from the
-hall. He first encountered a workman halfway up a ladder, standing
-against a building in course of erection, and called out to him to
-come and draw lots for the chairmanship of the county. The man on the
-ladder, owing probably to the hammering that was going on, evidently
-only imperfectly heard, for instead of replying, he hailed his mate on
-the roof with a "Hi, Bill! here is a go. They wants me to go and be
-chairman of the county." Bill leant over the parapet, and delivered
-himself as follows--"You take my tip, Jack, and have nothing to do
-with 'em!" and this advice Jack concluded to follow, and refused to be
-beguiled from his ladder. Nothing daunted, however, the public-spirited
-volunteer proceeded with his search, and after a considerable lapse of
-time, returned with a small boy in charge, whom he triumphantly marched
-up the hall, amid murmurs of applause.
-
-In the meantime the only "bell-topper" to be found among the head-gear
-of the assembled sages had been called into requisition, placed in
-position on the table, and the names of the proposed chairmen written
-on pieces of paper and laid in it.
-
-The boy was now commanded to approach the hat and draw. At this
-supreme moment the scene was most impressive. Round about, in various
-attitudes, betokening the deep interest they felt in the proceedings,
-were the eight councillors, and on tiptoes in front of the table was
-the small boy, endeavouring amid profound silence to fathom the depths
-of the bell-topper. Never before had that small boy in the course of
-his brief life been such an object of interest outside his own family.
-The eyes of the leading men in the county were on him, and the election
-of chairman of the County Council was in his hands. It ought to have
-been a proud moment for that lad, but I regret to record he hardly
-seemed duly impressed.
-
-At last his not too nimble fingers secured one of the pieces of paper,
-the boy became once more an insignificant atom of humanity in flour-bag
-pants, and the selected chairman was duly announced. He assumed the
-position with a calm dignity and solemnity, which seemed to proclaim
-him as not being unaccustomed to such honours, and the County Council
-proceeded to business.
-
-[Illustration: The Supreme Moment.[A]]
-
-[Footnote A: In order to avoid the possibility of giving offence, I
-have taken care not to caricature any actual members of the Council.]
-
-The practical working of this system is not at present very
-satisfactory, and the last half-yearly statement of accounts shows
-that the roads of the district were not so economically managed as
-when they were under the former Road Boards, which did not involve the
-keeping up of this august body, the County Council.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-_CONCLUSION._
-
-
-At the commencement of this narrative, I expressed my opinion that
-persons fond of outdoor amusements, and with moderate incomes, would
-get on very well in New Zealand. Four or five hundred a year is thought
-little of at home, but a gentleman out here with such an income, would
-be deemed a man of very considerable importance, and if he felt an
-inclination for politics, would have little difficulty in securing a
-seat in the House of Representatives.
-
-These are the kind of men the colony wants--men who would take up
-politics for the good of their adopted country, and not for the sake of
-an honorarium which the country cannot afford to pay.
-
-New Zealand has now passed the pioneer stage, and, like a newly built
-and furnished hotel, is prepared to receive any amount of visitors,
-but they must bring their cheque books with them. She has all the
-necessaries of ordinary civilised life, plenty of labour, cities lit
-with gas and the electric light, churches, houses furnished with
-bath-rooms and hot and cold water pipes, clubs, hotels, railways,
-telephones, roads, carriages, tramways, steamships, yachts, billiard
-rooms, and her big dock in Auckland, which Mr. Froude laughs at in
-"Oceana."
-
-Now I cannot resist saying a word or two about this part of his book.
-
-Mr. Froude seems annoyed with the citizens of Auckland for the
-improvements they are carrying out, particularly with the dock, and
-predicts that New Zealand will never grow into a new nation thus.
-
-I don't for a moment presume to dispute Mr. Froude's judgment with
-regard to the baneful effect likely to be produced by a big dock on
-a young colony; it is a subject I have never studied, and I have no
-intention of pitting my opinion against his. Still, _humanum est
-errare_, and Mr. Froude, though an historian, is human, and in this
-particular instance, most colonials in the province of Auckland think
-mistaken as well, as he certainly is with regard to the harbour and
-the dimensions of the dock. Referring to them, he says: "Public works
-form the excuse for the borrowing, and there are works enough and to
-spare in progress. They are laying out a harbour, cutting down half
-a hillside in the process, suited for the ambitious Auckland that is
-to be, but ten times larger than there is present need of. They are
-excavating the biggest graving dock in the world (the _Great Eastern_
-would float in it with ease), preparing for the fleets, which are to
-make Auckland their headquarters."
-
-I am utterly at a loss to know what Mr. Froude means by saying they
-are laying out a harbour, as Auckland harbour has been laid out by
-nature, and man has had no hand in it. A part of the foreshore has
-certainly been reclaimed within the last three or four years, and
-on the reclaimed land now stands the Auckland railway terminus, the
-Auckland Freezing Company's premises, some large flour mills, an
-hotel, and some other buildings. To fill in this reclamation, they
-utilised a precipitous hill, over-shadowing the main road from Parnell
-to Auckland, which was slipping, and in a highly dangerous condition;
-but how can that be called "laying out a harbour"? The hill had to be
-removed, as part actually slipped one morning, carried away a building,
-and fell across the road, nearly burying an omnibus and its contents.
-
-Does Mr. Froude blame the Harbour Board for converting this dangerous
-hillside into valuable building land?
-
-With regard to dimensions, the new Auckland dock, "The Calliope" (which
-Mr. Froude calls the biggest in the world), is 500 feet long. There
-are two docks, I believe, at Birkenhead, each 750 feet long; two at
-Plymouth, each 644 feet long; one now in course of construction in
-Sydney, N.S.W., 630 feet long; one at Carleton, N.B., 630 feet long;
-and one at Liverpool, 501 feet long. The _Great Eastern_ steamship is
-one of the two vessels afloat that will _not fit_ in the Calliope dock.
-
-So much for Mr. Froude's facts about the dimensions of the dock. Now a
-word about the wisdom of having made it.
-
-Auckland harbour is, without question, one of the best natural
-harbours in the universe. Its depth is so great that ships can enter
-at any state of the tide. A channel a mile wide, and so perfectly
-clear of obstacles that the services of the pilot are often dispensed
-with, leads to its entrance, which is snugly sheltered by outlying
-islands. Its coaling facilities are magnificent, the supply of coal
-inexhaustible, and its position with regard to the groups of islands
-forming the eastern portion of the continent of Australasia, must
-render it, I should think, a desirable point for a naval station. All
-it required to make it perfect was a dock of sufficient dimensions to
-take in any of Her Majesty's ships of war, and hence the big dock. If
-Auckland is ever utilised as a naval station, immense benefit must
-accrue to the town. A man of war or two, with six or seven hundred
-hands apiece, means a good many hundred pounds' worth of business a
-week to the tradesmen of Auckland. But Mr. Froude says this sort of
-thing will never make New Zealand a nation. He thinks the people should
-go and live in the country, raise crops, breed sheep and cattle, and
-not bother about towns and big docks. Surely he forgets that the farmer
-must have a market, and that his prosperity depends on the demand for
-his produce, and therefore in a great measure on the prosperity of the
-towns.
-
-A few more words, and I will have said my say. I trust the reader
-will pardon all my shortcomings, and will bear in mind that I have
-only endeavoured to describe my own experiences in the colony, my
-own impression concerning matters that have come under my notice,
-and some opinions I have gathered from old colonials. I know nothing
-of agricultural pursuits, but believe that the kind of farming most
-suitable to this part of the colony is sheep-farming, my principal
-reasons for so thinking being that many of the Kaiparians appear to
-do well at it, and that a Matakohe resident, our local J.P., carries
-off nearly every year two or three prizes for sheep at the Annual
-Show held in Auckland, and last year the first prize for Shropshires.
-Grapes do splendidly in this district, and I think wine-making will one
-day become a leading industry. The olive also grows remarkably well,
-and I fancy I see another industry sticking out in that direction.
-Our mineral resources have never been tapped, hough there are many
-indications of hidden wealth.
-
-The colony is undoubtedly passing through a period of depression (in
-which it is by no means singular), and is suffering as well from too
-much government, both local and general. It however still possesses
-plenty of vitality, and only wants time, and men earnest for its good,
-at the head of affairs, to nurse it into a vigorous and flourishing
-condition.
-
-At the present, indeed, it offers little inducement to professional
-men, to endeavour to pursue their callings, but what better time, when
-land is so cheap, could be selected by gentlemen with small fixed
-incomes to come out, and purchase properties. I should strongly advise
-family men to bring if possible their own servants with them, and to
-get an agreement signed immediately on reaching Auckland, binding them,
-on consideration of the passage money, to remain a certain time in
-their service at certain wages. I cannot help thinking that there are
-many at home with moderate incomes who would do far better out here,
-and who could become important personages in New Zealand if they chose
-to take up public matters. They must, however, as I mentioned before,
-be people who like a free and easy life, untrammelled by stiff rules of
-society. The climate of the North Island is said to be all that can be
-desired for those whom a tropical life has unsuited to endure the harsh
-winds, the fogs, and the cold of England; and although I have not
-travelled the colony sufficiently to feel competent to pass an opinion
-as to which are the most desirable localities, still I do not think I
-can be wrong in mentioning as a summer or autumn retreat the Northern
-Kaipara.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
- PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO.
- EDINBURGH AND LONDON.
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes
-
- Page 19: Page 20: Page 29: changed, Manakan to Manukau
- Page 76: Page 83: Page 102: Page 140: Page 197: changed, Nikan to Nikau
- Page 112: changed, lessons to lessens
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KAIPARA, OR EXPERIENCES OF A SETTLER
-IN NORTH NEW ZEALAND ***
-
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-<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KAIPARA, OR EXPERIENCES OF A SETTLER IN NORTH NEW ZEALAND ***</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nopagebreak" title="">Transcriber's Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Changes made are noted at the <a href="#end_note" title="Go to the End Note">end of the book.</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_cover.jpg" alt="" width="623" height="1020" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<h1>KAIPARA.</h1>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="gothic">Ballantyne Press</span></p>
-<p class="center p60">BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO.</p>
-<p class="center p60">EDINBURGH AND LONDON</p>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="293" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Kaipara.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center p200"> KAIPARA</p>
-
-<p class="center p60"> OR</p>
-
-<p class="center p80"> <em>EXPERIENCES OF A SETTLER IN</em><br /></p>
-<p class="center p80"> <em>NORTH NEW ZEALAND</em></p>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="gothic"> Written and Illustrated</span></p>
-<p class="center p60"> BY</p>
-<p class="center"> P. W. BARLOW</p>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<p class="center p80"> <i>SECOND EDITION.</i></p>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<p class="center p90"> LONDON</p>
-<p class="center p90"> SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON</p>
-<p class="center p80"> <em>LIMITED</em></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="gothic"> St. Dunstan's House</span></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Fetter lane, Fleet Street, E.C.</span></p>
-<p class="center">1889</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center"><span class="gothic">Inscribed</span></p>
-
-<p class="center p60"> TO</p>
-
-<p class="center"> <em>W.H. BARLOW, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span>, F.R.S.</em>,</p>
-<p class="center p60"> OF HIGH COMBE, OLD CHARLTON,</p>
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<p class="center p80"> AS A TOKEN OF</p>
-
-<p class="center p80"> DEEP RESPECT, GRATITUDE, AND AFFECTION.</p>
-
-<p class="center p80"> BY HIS NEPHEW,</p>
-
-<p class="name-r p80"> <em>THE NARRATOR</em>.
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> fact that nothing has hitherto been published
-concerning life in this part of New
-Zealand from the pen of a <em>bona-fide</em> settler has
-induced me to write the following pages.</p>
-
-<p>Before commencing the undertaking, I had
-been at considerable pains to satisfy myself of
-the truth of this fact, and naturally so, for it is
-the life-buoy I cling to as I take this, my first
-dip, in the sea of literature; it is my one excuse
-for troubling the public, and in it consists my
-hope that they will consent to be troubled.</p>
-
-<p>I do not pretend to literary talent, and my
-highest ambition is to lay the true narrative
-of my experiences in New Zealand before the
-public in a readable form. If successful in
-doing this, I shall be content, and trust that
-my readers will be also.</p>
-
-<p>Many books have been written describing
-colonial life in this and other parts, in some of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span>which the writers have identified themselves
-with the characters in their stories; but these
-have invariably been the works of <em>visitors to the
-colony</em>, not <em>settlers in it</em>.</p>
-
-<p>There is to my mind as much difference
-between the two experiences as there is between
-the experience of a <em>volunteer</em> and that of
-a <em>soldier of the line</em>, and it is on this account
-that I approach the public with some small
-degree of confidence, and venture to lay before
-my readers the experiences of a settler in North
-New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p class="right">THE NARRATOR.</p>
-
-<p class="indent3"><span class="smcap">Matakohe, Kaipara,</span></p>
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Province of Auckland, New Zealand.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table id="table.toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
- <th><small>CHAP.</small></th>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <th><small>PAGE</small></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="chapnum">I.</td>
- <td>OUR ARRIVAL IN THE NEW COUNTRY</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">II.</td>
- <td>AN AUCKLAND TABLE-D'HÔTE</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">III.</td>
- <td>A CHAT ABOUT AUCKLAND</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">IV.</td>
- <td>MORE ABOUT AUCKLAND</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">V.</td>
- <td>MY FIRST RAILWAY JOURNEY</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">VI.</td>
- <td>LIVING IN NEW ZEALAND</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">VII.</td>
- <td>A PERILOUS JOURNEY</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">VIII.</td>
- <td>THE "TERROR"</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">IX.</td>
- <td>A SALE BY AUCTION</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_60">60</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">X.</td>
- <td>THE FAITHLESS MARY ANN</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XI.</td>
- <td> MY INTRODUCTION TO KAIPARA</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_72">72</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XII.</td>
- <td>A WILD PIG HUNT</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XIII.</td>
- <td>PURCHASING LIVE-STOCK</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XIV.</td>
- <td>A COLONIAL BALL</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XV.</td>
- <td> THE FORESTS OF NORTH NEW ZEALAND</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XVI.</td>
- <td>THE LABOURING-MAN SETTLER</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XVII.</td>
- <td>KAIPARA FISH</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XVIII.</td>
- <td> GODWIT SHOOTING</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</a></span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XIX.</td>
- <td>THE KAURI GUMDIGGER</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_142">142</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XX.</td>
- <td>A STORY OF A BUSHRANGER</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXI.</td>
- <td>SPORTS</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXII.</td>
- <td>SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT IN NEW ZEALAND</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXIII.</td>
- <td>KAIPARA INSECTS</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXIV.</td>
- <td>A MAORI WEDDING</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_194">194</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXV.</td>
- <td>SYSTEM OF EDUCATION IN NEW ZEALAND</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXVI.</td>
- <td> A MEETING OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_206">206</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="chapnum">XXVII.</td>
- <td> CONCLUSION</td>
- <td class="right"><a href="#Page_212">212</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>KAIPARA.</h2>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>OUR ARRIVAL IN THE NEW COUNTRY.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">On</span> the second day of July 1883, in company
-with my wife, six children, a servant girl, and a
-full-rigged sailing ship&mdash;captain, mates, doctor,
-and crew included&mdash;I, the writer of this narrative,
-arrived at the port of Auckland.</p>
-
-<p>Our voyage had occupied one hundred and
-six days, and every one concerned was mightily
-sick of it.</p>
-
-<p>Myself and family and the doctor were the
-only occupants of the saloon, and as the latter
-had been ill for a considerable portion of the
-voyage, and the captain and myself were at
-loggerheads, things had not been quite so cheerful
-as they might have been. We had had more
-than our fair share of bad weather too: seven
-weeks of continuous gales, during which the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>ship had been more or less under water&mdash;or, as
-the mate put it, "had only come up to blow"
-occasionally&mdash;and our provisions had near run
-out, so it will readily be believed the prospect
-of once more treading dry land was hailed
-with delight by all.</p>
-
-<p>I am a civil engineer by profession, and
-having for some time found it very difficult to
-obtain employment in the old country, rejoiced
-in the prospect of getting work in New Zealand
-in connection with a land company, who were
-the owners of a large tract of land&mdash;500,000
-acres&mdash;situated as nearly as possible in the centre
-of the north island. This company had a board
-of directors in London, from one of whom&mdash;a
-friend of an uncle of mine&mdash;I had a very kind
-letter of introduction to the company's manager
-in New Zealand. My intention was to buy a
-few of the company's acres and build a house
-at the place where they were laying out a large
-town. Being the first in the field, and having
-such a good letter of introduction, as well as
-very fair testimonials, I felt confident of success.</p>
-
-<p>However, to return to our ship. As soon
-as she anchored off the floating magazine to
-discharge her gunpowder, before coming alongside
-the wharf, I looked about for a means of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>getting ashore, and was lucky enough to have a
-passage offered me in the steam launch which
-had brought the health officer on board.</p>
-
-<p>My mind was too bent on discovering house-room
-for my family, to think much of anything
-else, though I must confess I was not impressed
-with my first view of Auckland. I walked up
-the main street and opened negotiations with
-some of the principal hotels, but these proving
-too expensive for my pocket, I wandered about
-hoping to come across a house with the familiar
-card "Apartments to let" displayed in the
-window. After a considerable wear of boot
-leather and temper without any satisfactory result,
-I entered a small hotel (by the way, every
-beer shop in New Zealand is an hotel) and
-besought information combined with a glass of
-ale and a biscuit.</p>
-
-<p>Having ascertained the whereabouts of what
-I was assured was a <em>most</em> respectable boarding-house,
-I set out for the place, and presently
-found myself opposite to a wooden structure
-in H&mdash;&mdash; Street, which seemed to my unaccustomed
-eyes to be a cross between an undersized
-barn and a gipsy's caravan.</p>
-
-<p>With hesitating hand I lifted the knocker, and
-my feeble rat-tap was after a considerable lapse
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>of time responded to by a female of doubtful age,
-and still more doubtful appearance. To this
-lady&mdash;they are all ladies in New Zealand&mdash;I
-told my wants, and was graciously informed that
-she would undertake to accommodate my whole
-family for six pounds per week,&mdash;which, by the
-way, was about one half the sum demanded by
-the most moderate of the hotels. With a feeling
-of relief at the prospect of getting suitable
-quarters at last, in reply to her invitation I
-entered the house.</p>
-
-<p>"This is where they has their meals," said
-my guide, with evident pride, as she opened a
-door on her left and disclosed a room looking
-for all the world like a skittle alley of unusually
-wide dimensions, with a long table down the
-middle of it. Not a vestige of carpet was there
-on the floor, which was far from clean, and
-sloped towards one corner. On both sides of
-the table were ranged a number of kitchen
-chairs, and these, with a sideboard bearing a
-strong resemblance to a varnished packing-case
-on end, completed the furniture.</p>
-
-<p>In a voice feeble with emotion, I requested
-to be shown the sleeping apartments, and was
-conducted to the back yard, down each side of
-which stood a long weather-boarded shed with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>six partitions in it; each divided portion being
-supplied with a window and a door, and forming
-a bedroom a little larger than a bathing-machine&mdash;which
-it internally greatly resembled.
-Three of these were placed at my disposal, and
-I hurried away in a cold perspiration, caused
-probably by the reflection, "Whatever will the
-wife say?"</p>
-
-<p>It was getting late, and I was getting tired.
-"Shall I have another hunt," I debated, and
-sacrifice the pound the wily proprietress of the
-caravan and bathing-machine had insisted on
-my leaving as a deposit.</p>
-
-<p>I knew we could not remain in the ship, as
-the stewards were discharged, and there was no
-one to attend to us. With a sigh I determined
-to stick to my bargain, and hurrying down to
-the wharf in Queen Street, secured the services
-of a waterman, and was soon alongside our erst-while
-floating home. On reaching the deck, my
-wife immediately accosted me as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Have you succeeded in getting rooms? The
-children have been <em>so</em> troublesome. They are
-longing to get on shore, and neither Mary Ann
-nor I can keep them quiet!"</p>
-
-<p>I assured her that after an immense expenditure
-of leg power I had succeeded in arranging
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>about quarters, and added&mdash;as a vision of the
-skittle alley and the bathing-machines flitted
-before me&mdash;that I doubted whether she would
-find them very comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! never fear, dear," she cheerfully rejoined.
-"After three months on board ship
-one ceases to be particular! All I long for is
-a bedroom with plenty of room to turn in."</p>
-
-<p>Again a vision of the bathing-boxes arose, and
-I trembled.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>AN AUCKLAND TABLE D'HÔTE.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> afternoon was closing in, so collecting the
-luggage required for immediate use, and locking
-the rest of our come-at-able belongings in
-our cabins, we made haste to get on board the
-same boat that had brought me out. My spirits
-had slightly revived, as it had occurred to me
-that very probably the caravan and its appurtenances
-would show to better advantage by
-gaslight.</p>
-
-<p>Queen Street Wharf was soon reached, and
-having settled the waterman's claim, I hailed a
-cab, into which we all bundled, and in a short
-time found ourselves at our destination. Summoning
-the landlady, and requesting her to show
-my wife the sleeping apartments, I stayed behind
-to see to the luggage, and&mdash;I don't mind
-confessing&mdash;to allow her time to get over the
-first shock.</p>
-
-<p>Entering our bedroom a little later with the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>portmanteaus, I was greatly pleased and surprised
-to find my wife apparently reconciled to the
-surroundings, her only remark on the subject
-being that it was a queer-looking place, and not
-much bigger than our cabin. She was greatly
-puzzled as to whether she ought to change her
-dress for an evening one before appearing in
-the public room, but I emphatically assured her&mdash;having
-the skittle alley in my eye&mdash;that it
-was quite unnecessary, and we remained chatting
-until a tinkling bell announced that tea was
-served.</p>
-
-<p>A strange scene awaited us on entering the
-eating shed. Some twelve or fourteen men&mdash;I
-beg pardon, gentlemen&mdash;and five ladies were
-seated on as many rough-looking kitchen chairs,
-busily engaged in attacking the comestibles
-placed before them.</p>
-
-<p>A few&mdash;a very decided few&mdash;contented themselves
-with making the fork the medium of
-communication between their food and their
-mouths, but the greater majority used for this
-purpose both knives and forks with equal skill
-and success.</p>
-
-<p>At our entrance they paused momentarily
-from their labour of love, and favoured us with
-grins which seemed to say, "What confounded
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>idiots you are to come here." One lady of
-angular aspect, and with hair of the corkscrew
-type of architecture, smiled affably, however,
-and, reassured by her complacency, we seated
-ourselves at her end of the table.</p>
-
-<p>The gentlemen, who, with three exceptions,
-sat in their shirt sleeves, were too deeply engrossed
-in the work before them to converse,
-and the clatter of knives and forks was for some
-time the only sound heard. We sat gazing at
-the scene, until a husky voice from behind
-demanded "Chops or 'am and eggs!" and
-recalled to our minds the object of our visit.
-Having decided in favour of chops, some black
-cindery looking bits of meat and bone were
-placed before us&mdash;resembling the delicious
-grilled chops of the London chop-house about
-as nearly as a bushman's stew resembles a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">vol-au-vent
-â la financière</i>.</p>
-
-<p>I managed to stay the pangs of hunger with
-the assistance of some hunches of stale bread,
-plates of which were ranged at intervals down
-the centre of the table. My poor wife, however,
-could scarcely eat anything. As soon
-as we decently could, for the coatless gentry
-were still at work, we retired to our rooms,
-both wife and self depressed in spirits, Mary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>Ann sulky, and the children in a state of subdued
-mutiny.</p>
-
-<p>"We will get out of this wretched hole to-morrow,
-so cheer up, dear," I exclaimed to my
-wife after a prolonged silence. "It's past seven
-o'clock now, and if you don't want me, I'll take
-a stroll down the town, and get something for
-supper."</p>
-
-<p>Off I went, and soon reached Queen Street,
-the principal thoroughfare of the town, which,
-to my great surprise, I found in semi-darkness,
-the only places lighted up being the hotels and
-tobacconists' shops.</p>
-
-<p>"No chance of getting anything for supper
-here," I thought, as I turned up a street which I
-concluded must lead back to H&mdash;&mdash; Street. I
-had not proceeded more than three hundred
-yards when I espied to my great joy a small
-shop with a blaze of light in the window, above
-which shone forth the legend "Oyster Saloon."
-With quickened step I approached, and peering
-in, beheld a remarkably neatly dressed and
-pretty young lady standing behind a little
-counter, and apparently fully occupied in doing
-nothing. On the counter stood some pickle
-bottles filled with extremely unpleasing-looking
-objects resembling large white slugs, while a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>heap of oysters with curiously corrugated shells
-were piled in one corner.</p>
-
-<p>Entering the establishment, I requested in
-polite terms to be informed the price of oysters.</p>
-
-<p>"A bob a bottle!" replied the ministering
-angel behind the counter.</p>
-
-<p>"A bob a bottle!" I repeated. "May I ask
-if that's colonial for a shilling a dozen?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! I see you're a new chum!" responded
-the young lady, in tones of mild contempt.
-"Well, oysters ain't sold here by the dozen;
-they are sold by the bottle! There are about
-four or five dozen, I reckon, in one of these!"
-indicating the bottles on the counter, with their
-revolting-looking contents.</p>
-
-<p>"But are those really good to eat?" I stammered.</p>
-
-<p>"Try them!" she replied, spooning from a
-bottle about a dozen on to a plate, and pushing
-it, together with a fork and a pepper-box,
-before me.</p>
-
-<p>Screwing up my courage, I got one into my
-mouth, another quickly followed, and in a remarkably
-short space of time the plate was
-emptied.</p>
-
-<p>"Capital! By Jove! I could not have believed
-they would be so good!" I exclaimed. "They
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>don't, you must confess, look very tempting in
-those bottles?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, perhaps not," said the fair one; "but,
-you see, these oysters grow firm on the rocks,
-and they are easy to open when fixed there by
-tapping the back of the upper shell with a
-hammer, but are terrors to tackle when loose
-like those," pointing to the heap in the corner.
-"Besides," she continued, holding up a bottle,
-"they are so much more convenient like this.
-Why, you would want a hand-barrow to carry
-five dozen of them in their shells!"</p>
-
-<p>"But how do you keep them fresh?" I
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said my entertainer, "boys pick them
-fresh for us every day, and what are not sold are
-thrown away!"</p>
-
-<p>Oh! ye epicures of London, with Whitstables
-at three and nine per dozen, and Colchesters at
-two and six, think on this&mdash;oysters pitched away
-daily, probably in hundreds, possibly in thousands!
-Grind your teeth with envy; but take
-my advice, stay where you are. You are not the
-sort for the colony, and living <em>isn't all oysters</em>.</p>
-
-<p>However, to resume. The oysters were so good
-that I asked for more, and invited the young
-damsel to join me; but she declined, and asked,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>in the course of conversation, what hotel I was
-staying at.</p>
-
-<p>I explained that, having a long family and a
-short purse, hotels were too expensive, and that
-we had that afternoon taken possession of a
-portion of a boarding-house in H&mdash;&mdash; Street,
-which said portion we had fully determined
-upon restoring to its owners on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>"Why not take apartments?" she rejoined.</p>
-
-<p>"Apartments!" I almost yelled. "Why, I
-have been prowling about for the best part of
-the day trying my utmost to find some, but
-could not see a single house with a card in the
-window!"</p>
-
-<p>"The idea! as if any lady would put a low
-card in her window," she sneered. "But if you
-want apartments, my ma has some to let, and
-I'll take you there, and introduce you, if you
-like."</p>
-
-<p>With much joy I acquiesced in the proposal,
-and having settled my account, and procured
-a bottle of oysters for home consumption, we
-proceeded to the maternal residence.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A CHAT ABOUT AUCKLAND.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> interview with the maternal parent proved
-thoroughly satisfactory, as did the maternal
-parent herself,&mdash;an elderly lady, neatly dressed
-in black, with silver grey hair, and a face which,
-before old Father Time had placed his brand on
-it, must have been very pretty.</p>
-
-<p>I promised to bring my "better half" in the
-morning to complete arrangements, and hurried
-home with my oysters, which with some difficulty
-I succeeded in persuading her to taste.
-Having once overcome her repugnance to their
-appearance, she enjoyed a good supper of them,
-with some bread and butter that I persuaded
-our hostess to let us have.</p>
-
-<p>Supper over, I detailed my adventures of the
-evening, to my wife's great delight, and we
-shortly after retired to bed, but, alas! not to
-sleep. Before the drowsy god could exert his
-influence over us, an opposing agent stepped
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>in, and we discovered to our horror that New
-Zealand numbered among her colonists certain
-nimble little creatures well known in the old
-country under the generic name of "Fleas;"
-the Maori name is "Mōrorohū," which, literally
-translated, means, I believe, "little stranger."
-They are supposed by some to represent the
-first importation of animal life that the English
-favoured Maoriland with.</p>
-
-<p>Since their too successful introduction, an
-Acclimatisation Society has been established,
-and under its auspices many animals and birds
-of different kinds have been acclimatised.
-Rabbits and sparrows are, I believe, numbered
-among its earliest ventures. Within the last
-year a large number of ferrets, stoats, and
-weasels have been introduced by the Government
-to destroy the rabbits, which have proved
-too many for the settlers in the south island;
-and probably before long we shall hear of snakes
-being brought out to kill the sparrows.</p>
-
-<p>What animal will be hit upon to destroy the
-stoats and weasels when their turn comes&mdash;and
-farmers in the localities where they have been
-set free already complain bitterly of them&mdash;I
-am at a loss to imagine, though I have no doubt
-the members of the Society, with the aid of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>a Natural History, will be able to solve the
-problem.</p>
-
-<p>The notion possesses me that if the Society
-continues to flourish we shall eventually become
-a sort of sea-girt Zoological Garden, and possibly
-be able to advertise tiger-hunting among the
-attractions of the New Zealand of the future.</p>
-
-<p>I trust my kind readers will pardon this
-digression, for which the "little strangers" and
-the sleeplessness accompanying their presence
-are responsible.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning we rose ourselves unrefreshed,
-though the unwilling refreshers of many. After
-breakfast, which resembled in every particular
-the meal of the previous evening, with the exception
-that stale flounders took the place of ham
-and eggs, a final interview with our landlady
-was held, and proved of not so stormy a character
-as I had anticipated: it was brought to a
-successful conclusion&mdash;at any rate on the landlady's
-part&mdash;by the handing over of another
-golden sovereign. Her strong point in argument
-was that we had agreed to stay for a week, and
-therefore must pay for a week. This logical
-conclusion I found it impossible to shake until
-I produced the sovereign, which acted like oil
-on troubled waters.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-<p>All difficulties being thereby overcome, we
-made haste to depart, and a cab shortly after deposited
-us and our luggage at our new quarters,
-with which my wife was much pleased.</p>
-
-<p>The clauses in the agreement arrived at
-concerning them were as follows:&mdash;Entire and
-exclusive use of a sitting-room and three bedrooms
-furnished; attendance on us to devolve
-on Mary Ann; cooking to devolve on landlady;
-housekeeping to devolve on my wife; and lastly,
-but not least, the payments for the apartments&mdash;three
-guineas per week&mdash;to devolve on me.</p>
-
-<p>Prior to leaving home I had given instructions
-to have my letters addressed to the
-Northern Club, Auckland, care of &mdash;&mdash;, Esquire,
-for whom I carried a letter of introduction; but
-anxious though I was to get home news, I had
-had hitherto no possible opportunity of going
-to look after them. Now the family were fairly
-housed, however, I hastened to relieve my
-anxiety, and found a couple of English letters
-awaiting me at the Club, which satisfied me that
-all was well with those dear to us in the old
-country. A good many of my letters, I learnt,
-had been forwarded to Cambridge to Mr.&mdash;&mdash;,
-who was staying there looking after the interests
-of the land company to which he was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>manager. I obtained his address, and sent him
-a wire stating our arrival, and requesting him
-to forward letters.</p>
-
-<p>Having settled that business, I hastened down
-to the wharf to see what progress our ship&mdash;which
-was now alongside the Tee&mdash;had made
-in the unloading of her cargo.</p>
-
-<p>I found the Tee heaped with cases already
-hoisted out of her capacious holds, though
-nothing of mine had as yet been disgorged.
-Having the keys of our cabins in my pocket, I
-decided to take out the things that were in
-them, and with the aid of a man and a hand
-truck they were safely conveyed to our rooms.</p>
-
-<p>My time was now my own, and I went for
-a stroll.</p>
-
-<p>Though not impressed with the appearance
-of Auckland itself, I thought the harbour and
-its natural surroundings remarkably pretty, yet
-lacking the grandeur of the Bay of Rio de
-Janeiro and other harbours I have seen. The
-formation of the land is curious, and gave me
-at first sight the idea of peaks which at one
-time had been bold, but which by some wonderful
-process had been either melted down into
-undulating mounds, or were in course of being
-melted down.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-<p>The peak on the isle of Rangitoto, which
-shelters the mouth of the harbour, Mount Eden,
-and numerous others, come under the latter
-description, while the north head and north
-shore generally come under the former. It
-was the north head that particularly attracted
-my attention as we first entered the harbour;
-it is shaped like a huge inverted basin, and is
-covered with grass. I can assure my readers
-that after one hundred and six days at sea the
-sight of that grassy mound was good, very good,
-and will never be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>The harbour called the Waitemata, opening
-on the east coast, is as a haven perfection; it
-is admirably sheltered, has sufficient capacity to
-hold half a dozen war squadrons, and is deep
-enough to allow the largest ship afloat to enter
-at dead low water and steam or sail right up
-to the Queen Street Wharf.</p>
-
-<p>On its southern shore stands Auckland and
-its suburbs, and on its northern the town or
-suburb of Devonport.</p>
-
-<p>Another harbour, the Manukau, opens on the
-west coast, and extends inland towards Auckland,
-leaving only a strip of land, in places not
-half a mile wide, between it and the waters of
-the Waitemata. It has unfortunately a bar, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>is therefore not much used by vessels of large
-size. The construction of a canal joining the
-two harbours has been proposed, for what purpose
-is not clear, unless the projectors have
-some scheme for doing away with the Manukau
-bar, thus allowing ships to come straight through
-to Auckland from the west coast. It is not at
-all improbable, however, that the promoters desire
-to have the canal cut simply for <em>the fun of
-making the land north of Auckland an island</em>.
-Of course the money expended on the work
-will have to be borrowed, so what matters!</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>MORE ABOUT AUCKLAND.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> principal street in the city of Auckland,
-as my reader has been already told, is Queen
-Street, terminating seawards in the Queen Street
-Wharf.</p>
-
-<p>It is not an imposing-looking thoroughfare.
-No indeed! and at the risk of catching it the
-next time I am down there, I repeat there is
-nothing imposing in it at all; neither the street,
-the houses, nor the tradesmen. There is little
-architectural beauty to be seen, and the shops
-have for the most part an unsubstantial appearance,
-particularly noticeable in the upper portion
-of the street. The lower, or wharf end, possesses
-some substantial-looking buildings of brick
-and stone, the most notable in 1883 being the
-post-office, the New Zealand Insurance Company's
-building, and the Bank of New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>The pavement on the left hand side for a
-considerable distance is sheltered by verandahs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>built from the upper part of the shop fronts,
-and extending as far as the roadway, where
-they are supported by cast-iron pillars. They
-form an agreeable protection from the sun, or
-from sudden showers of rain, and are remarkable
-as evincing an effort to study the public
-comfort&mdash;an effort very seldom made in New
-Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>Since I landed in 1883 the town has undergone
-great improvements. A good-sized railway
-terminus now stands at the foot of Queen Street.
-Tramways run in all directions. A great many
-brick buildings, some five stories high, have
-been run up. The Auckland Freezing Company
-have erected very extensive premises of brick
-on ground reclaimed from the bay. An art
-gallery and public library, contained in a really
-handsome building, has been opened. <cite>The
-Star</cite> newspaper proprietor has built large new
-offices; and an arcade with shops almost rivalling
-in style and finish those of its elder brother in
-London&mdash;the Burlington&mdash;has lately been completed.
-On the north shore a magnificent
-graving dock is in course of construction, which
-will be able, when finished, to take in the largest
-ships afloat but two, viz., <em>The Great Eastern</em>
-and <em>The City of Rome</em>.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-<p>With the exception, perhaps, that the majority
-of the houses are of timber, Auckland may be
-said to resemble the ordinary run of colonial
-cities: it has an unusually fair share of churches
-and chapels of all denominations, and a still fairer
-share of public-houses&mdash;I ask pardon&mdash;hotels.</p>
-
-<p>Of places of public amusement, with the exception
-of a dingy little theatre very seldom
-used, and a so-called opera-house where occasional
-performances take place, it has virtually
-none, and to this fact is undoubtedly to be
-ascribed the large amount of drunkenness that
-exists.</p>
-
-<p>The vast number of places where drink can
-be obtained show what a brisk liquor trade is
-done; but if half these places were abolished,
-it would not, I believe, lessen the drunkenness
-by a single man. Gumdiggers, farmers, bushmen,
-fishermen, and all sorts and conditions of
-men frequent Auckland town when flush of
-money, and they <i>will</i> have some amusement!
-There are no music-halls, concert-rooms, or
-other places where they can go and smoke their
-pipes and enjoy themselves, therefore they fall
-back on the hotels.</p>
-
-<p>It may be wrong and wicked, but it's human
-nature. As Dickens' immortal Squeers says,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>"Natur's a rum un;" and all the head shakings
-and turning up of the eyes on the part of the
-pious won't alter the fact.</p>
-
-<p>I was wrong, however, to say there are no
-places of amusement except the theatre and
-opera-house. There is one. It is called the
-"Sailor's Rest." Suppose (to use a colonialism)
-we put in an hour or two there.</p>
-
-<p>After ascending a steep break-neck sort of
-stair-ladder erected in the back part of a shop,
-we stand in a large room hung about with
-flags. At one end is a stage, and scattered
-about are small tables, seated round which we
-see marines and blue-jackets from Her Majesty's
-ship lying in the harbour, fishermen, shop
-assistants, and working men of all sorts. They
-are chatting and playing at dominoes, draughts,
-and other games. Presently "order" is called
-from the stage, a lady takes her seat at the
-piano, which occupies one corner, and a gentleman
-comes forward, makes his bow, and sings a
-very good song to her accompaniment.</p>
-
-<p>Another song follows, then a duet, inspired
-by which a marine and a blue-jacket volunteer
-a second duet, ascend the stage, and sing it
-capitally; another sailor follows with a comic
-song, a gumdigger gives a recitation, and so
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>the evening wears away. The room is crammed,
-and in the back part near the stairs smoking is
-allowed, so the smoker is not deprived of half
-his evening's enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>Ladies, <i>real</i> Christian ladies&mdash;not "eye
-rollers" and "head shakers"&mdash;flit about ministering
-to the wants of their visitors. Coffee is
-served, and the proceedings close with a hymn,
-which I must confess sounds out of place after
-the comic songs, and I think would have been
-better omitted. By the time the audience have
-dispersed the hotels are closed.</p>
-
-<p>How those hotel-keepers must <em>abominate</em>
-that flag-draped room up the back stairs! If
-there were a few more such places in Auckland
-it would mean <em>death to them</em>.</p>
-
-<p>While on the subject of Auckland, let me
-say a few words about the shops and the shop-keepers.
-First the shops. One very noticeable
-feature in the majority of them is the absence
-of taste in the display of their contents; there
-is nothing to attract the eye, and however good
-the articles may be in themselves, they are
-seldom shown to advantage, but are huddled
-together in the window anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to their attendants. In the
-larger shops you always find civility, but never
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>any approach to servility: the shopman does not
-press you to purchase, but if you elect to do
-so, you may. It is a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">quid pro quo</i> transaction,
-with no obligation on either side. In the inferior
-shops you too often miss the civility, and the
-proprietor appears to consider he is conferring
-a favour by allowing you to buy. No attempt,
-at any rate, is ever made to push a trade.</p>
-
-<p>The same feeling which pervades the manly
-tradesman's breast appears also to influence the
-lodging-house and boarding-house owners. "<em>If
-you want any article you must come and ask if
-we've got it</em>," and "<em>if you want apartments you
-must find out our address&mdash;we are not going to
-bother</em>," are the sentiments which I fancy form
-the basis of the trading principles of the aristocratic
-tradesmen and lodging-house keepers of
-Auckland. The reader will perhaps recollect
-the trouble I had in trying to find rooms when
-we first arrived, and the awful place where I
-eventually deposited my family. Now that I
-am well acquainted with the town, I find there
-are plenty of nice apartments and boarding-houses,
-though it would be impossible for a
-stranger to discover them: if I were an Irishman,
-I'd say&mdash;he would require to be in Auckland a
-month before he arrived in order to do so.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>MY FIRST RAILWAY JOURNEY.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I omitted</span> in the last chapter to state that
-Auckland possesses a hospital (perfect for its
-size), and some grand butchers' shops.</p>
-
-<p>The hospital I have been all over, thanks to
-the courtesy of the resident physician, and I do
-not believe that for brightness, ventilation, and
-all other essentials, its wards are to be surpassed
-by those of any hospital in London. I trust my
-readers will not imagine by my speaking of the
-butchers' shops and the hospital in the same
-breath that I desire to indicate that these
-institutions have anything in common or are
-sympathetic.</p>
-
-<p>With this explanation I will proceed to the
-butchers' shops. Meat is the principal feather in
-New Zealand's cap: it is the one really substantial
-cheap necessary of life, and New Zealanders
-have not forgotten to make the most of it.
-It is the bait that has been found most attractive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-in the immigrant fishery, and by the use of
-which the agent-general has landed the majority
-of the immigrants in this colony. The shops
-where it is sold are quite a feature in the town,
-and must on no account be neglected. They are
-very large&mdash;larger, I think, than any in London,
-with the exception perhaps of one belonging to
-Messrs. Spiers &amp; Pond near Blackfriars Bridge.
-They are also very bright and clean looking,
-being lined throughout, ceiling and all, with
-white glazed tiles. On horizontal bars of bright
-steel suspended from the ceiling are hung the
-carcasses of sheep and bullocks in vast numbers,
-while legs and shoulders of mutton, sirloins of
-beef and other joints are disposed on tables projecting
-from the walls. They are without doubt
-the most killing-looking shops in Auckland.</p>
-
-<p>The auction marts form another prominent
-feature in the town, and of these I will have
-something to say by-and-by; for the present I
-think I had better return to my own affairs.</p>
-
-<p>The letters which had taken a trip to Cambridge
-(Waikato) had now returned, in company
-with one from Mr.&mdash;&mdash;, who informed me he
-would be in town in a day or two, and would
-call. We therefore had nothing to do till then
-but amuse ourselves.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
-<p>A trip to Remuera, the prettiest suburb of
-Auckland, in an uncomfortable omnibus, occupied
-one day. On the next, as my wife wished
-to do shopping, I decided to find out what
-shooting was to be obtained in the neighbourhood,
-and in furtherance of that object entered
-the shop of one of the two gunsmiths in Queen
-Street and accosted its proprietor, from whom
-I learned that there was some grand curlew
-shooting to be had at Onehunga, a place about
-eight miles off, on the Manukau Harbour. I
-immediately determined to go there, and see if I
-could not make a bag. As I found Onehunga
-was to be reached by rail as well as omnibus, I
-decided to try the former, with a view principally
-to the saving of time; so taking my gun,
-cartridge belt, and game bag, I made, in colonial
-parlance, "tracks" for the station, and took
-ticket for Onehunga and back, the high charge
-made&mdash;half-a-crown&mdash;astonishing me considerably.
-I was fortunate in just catching a train,
-but not so lucky in my choice of compartments,
-for I discovered, after the train had given its
-preliminary jerk&mdash;a mode of progression peculiar
-to New Zealand railway trains&mdash;that the gentleman
-by my side was suffering from an injudicious
-application of alcohol.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-<p>The seats in New Zealand railway carriages
-run "fore and aft"&mdash;that is, lengthways&mdash;and
-when the first jerk came the afflicted gentleman
-toppled over against me, and I had some trouble
-in getting him fixed up perpendicularly again;
-the next jerk, however, found me prepared, and
-I met him half way, with a force that sent him
-over against his neighbour on the other side.
-This evidently did not meet with approbation,
-for he was shot back to me promptly, and we kept
-him going between us like an inverted pendulum.
-The "overcharged" individual operated upon
-took it perfectly quietly, evidently considering
-his oscillations quite the correct thing when
-travelling on a New Zealand railway. Playing
-battledore and shuttlecock with a drunken man
-is tiring work, however, and I was glad to change
-my seat at the first station we stopped at.</p>
-
-<p>After three quarters of an hour of the roughest
-railway travelling I had ever experienced&mdash;progress
-being attained by a series of violent jerks&mdash;Onehunga
-was reached, and I descended and
-strolled away from the station, fully convinced
-that the railway authorities charged by time,
-not mileage; and this conviction I have since
-seen no reason to alter.</p>
-
-<p>Onehunga is not an interesting port, and I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>have no intention of describing it; suffice it to
-say that it is decidedly straggling. Going into
-an hotel near the station, I procured some
-lunch, and was directed to the most likely
-place for curlew. I laid up for them in some
-all swamp grass, and waited patiently, but
-never saw a curlew all the afternoon, and what
-is more, have never seen one since I have been
-in New Zealand. I am positive there is not
-such a bird to be found in the colony, or, at
-any rate, in the province of Auckland; what
-are called curlew here are really godwit&mdash;the
-feathering of the two birds is almost identical,
-and both have long beaks, but the curlew's
-curve downwards and the godwit's upwards.
-The latter is a splendid bird for the table,
-while the curlew is scarcely worth the picking.
-I have shot dozens of them in the old country,
-and hundreds of godwits out here, so I ought
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>I would not have wearied the reader with the
-above remarks had I not so often read in books,
-and more than once in newspapers out here,
-of the curlew in New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>When I reached the railway station, homeward
-bound, I had a long time to wait for a
-train, and walking up and down the dreary
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>platform, I did not, no! I greatly fear I did
-not, bless that Queen Street gunsmith. The
-train arriving at last, I was jerked back to
-Auckland in an unenviable frame of mind.</p>
-
-<p>The bag I made that day at Onehunga consisted
-of one king-fisher, which I looked on at
-the time as a great curiosity. I am wiser now,
-for they are the commonest bird we have in
-this part of the colony&mdash;commoner even than
-sparrows; but that Onehunga king-fisher I
-skinned and got stuffed, and that Onehunga
-king-fisher I still value highly. He is the first
-bird I ever shot in New Zealand, and he is the
-last bird I ever intend shooting at Onehunga.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>LIVING IN NEW ZEALAND.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Sunday</span> had now arrived&mdash;our first Sunday in
-Auckland. It is kept, as in England, as a day
-of rest, except by those unhappy individuals who
-are unfortunate enough to reside near a Salvation
-Army barracks! There is no rest or peace
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning we heard the distant
-sound of martial music, and imagined that some
-volunteer corps was going to hold church parade;
-but as the sounds came nearer we were undeceived&mdash;no
-volunteer corps that ever existed
-would consent to march behind such ear-torturing
-noises. I hurried out and found that the
-disturbing sounds proceeded from the Salvation
-Army band. I am told that these Salvationists
-do a good deal of good: if they really help
-people to heaven with the awful apology for a
-band they at present possess, surely they would
-do a vast deal more good if they had better
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>instruments and more practised bandsmen.
-The big drum, cornet, trombone, flute, and
-other instruments take a leading position in
-their ceremonial, and should therefore be put
-on a thoroughly efficient footing. If this were
-done, many persons who now rush away holding
-their ears when the Salvation Army band is
-heard approaching would stay, if only to listen
-to the music.</p>
-
-<p>We attended service at St. Paul's Church, and
-had scarcely returned when Mr. &mdash;&mdash; called.
-We found him very gentlemanly and agreeable.
-He dined with us, spent the afternoon, and gave
-us a good deal of valuable advice. He said the
-roads were far too bad for my wife to think of
-going up country yet, and recommended my
-securing a house in Auckland for three or four
-months, and after seeing my family settled, that
-I myself should take a trip to the new township
-in order to see what I thought of it, and then
-make my final arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>This advice appeared so sound that I determined
-to follow it implicitly. On Monday
-morning, therefore, I started out on a house
-hunt, and with little trouble succeeded in finding
-a suitable verandah cottage in the suburb of
-Parnell. My goods by this time were landed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>and stored in a warehouse near the wharf, so
-before our week was up at the lodgings I had
-them removed to our new home, in which we
-were soon comfortably installed.</p>
-
-<p>Parnell is undoubtedly the aristocratic suburb
-of Auckland. It is as pretty as aristocratic, and
-I trust we sufficiently appreciated the honour
-of being the temporary possessors of a cottage
-within its precincts.</p>
-
-<p>Several retired naval and military officers, and
-gentlemen from other of the recognised professions
-with small private incomes, reside there
-with their families, and form a society, agreeable,
-enjoyable, and exclusive. There is not
-the least doubt that New Zealand is a grand
-country for English people with certain tastes
-and private incomes of, say five or six hundred
-a year. I don't refer to those who are fond of
-theatre-going and such like vanities, or those who
-place cookery among the fine arts, for, as I have
-already hinted, New Zealand is no place for them.
-The persons I mean are the lovers of outdoor
-amusements, such as riding, sailing, fishing, and
-shooting, and those who like their rubber of
-whist, their chat and game of billiards at the
-Club, and their social, unceremonious evenings
-with their friends. The happy possessor of an
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>income such as I have indicated could own a
-house in town and a place also in the country,
-where he might with his family pass the summer
-months; his country property need cost him
-nothing to keep up, for he would have no difficulty
-in finding a respectable working-man
-tenant, who, if allowed to live rent free and
-work the land, would not only look after the
-place and keep fences, &amp;c., in repair, but would
-willingly keep his (the owner of the property's)
-horses in horse feed all the year.</p>
-
-<p>If he selected the north Kaipara district, his
-property would be bordered by the inland sea,
-and he could keep his five-ton cutter sailing-boat,
-and enjoy the most delightful water excursions
-up the numberless beautiful creeks.
-A two-roomed shanty, costing about £30, would
-be ample accommodation for the working-man
-tenant.</p>
-
-<p>But I can imagine my reader exclaiming,
-"Living must be much cheaper than in England
-to enable people with moderate competencies
-to thus have within their reach almost all the
-enjoyments which fall to the lot of rich county
-families?"</p>
-
-<p>It is not so, however: the necessities of life,
-with a few exceptions, are on the contrary dearer
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>in New Zealand than at home, but the out-of-door
-pleasures of life are <em>infinitely cheaper</em>.
-Small properties of twenty or thirty acres
-planted, fenced, and laid out in paddocks,
-orchards, &amp;c., with a good six or seven roomed
-house, and outbuildings, can be bought for four
-or five hundred pounds; decent hacks to ride
-at from seven to ten pounds a piece; and a good
-second hand five-ton sailing-boat for between
-twenty and thirty pounds.</p>
-
-<p>Children can be fairly well educated in the
-private schools of Auckland at far less cost than
-they can be in England.</p>
-
-<p>In New Zealand it is not necessary to keep
-up the same style as in the old country&mdash;a
-man is not supposed to keep a wine cellar: he
-eschews top hats, kid gloves, &amp;c.: his dress suit
-is more likely to deteriorate by moths than by
-wear: he lives plainly, and dresses so: his
-clothes which are too shabby for town he can
-wear out in the country&mdash;no one will think him
-one whit less a gentleman if he appears in
-trousers patched at the knees. Set dinner
-parties are not fashionable, though pot luck
-invitations are. To gentlemen and ladies who
-cannot enjoy their meal unless it is served <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à
-la Russe</i>, I say&mdash;Stay where you are!&mdash;but to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>those who can enjoy a good plain dinner plainly
-put on the table, and are contented to drink
-with it a glass of ale or a cup of tea, the usual
-colonial beverage, and who are fond of outdoor
-amusements, I emphatically cry&mdash;Come! this
-is the country for you. You can have your
-own and country house&mdash;your horses and your
-sailing-boat, your fishing and shooting&mdash;and can
-save money. Ay! and invest it profitably too,
-if you keep your eyes open.</p>
-
-<p>I trust the kind reader will excuse the foregoing
-outburst, and accept my assurance that I
-am not a tout for a land company. I am anything
-but in love with land companies now.
-But to resume.</p>
-
-<p>My family being now in comfortable quarters,
-I started on my journey to "the town that was
-to be," in which all my hopes were centred.</p>
-
-<p>The railway jerked me as far as the village
-of Hamilton, some eighty-six miles from Auckland,
-in a little over five hours and three-quarters,
-I having travelled <em>by the fast train</em>.
-From thence I was conveyed to Cambridge by
-coach, and was soon settled <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro tem</i> in a comfortable
-hotel. I had still thirty odd miles to
-travel, and had been puzzling my head all day
-long how to manage it, as I feared I should
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>never find my way riding by myself; but here
-luck befriended me, for to my great delight I
-found a party of surveyors, four in number,
-staying at the hotel <em>en route</em> for the very
-place. I speedily made their acquaintance, and
-was informed they had hired for the journey a
-four-wheeled trap, called a buggy, and would
-be very glad to have me for a travelling companion,
-as they had a spare seat. I need
-scarcely say I joyfully accepted their kind offer,
-and we were soon on the most friendly terms.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A PERILOUS JOURNEY.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">The</span> news that greeted my ears the following
-morning on entering the breakfast room was
-that the all important buggy had arrived, and
-that we were to start as soon as possible in
-order to accomplish the journey by daylight.
-I made a hasty meal therefore, and was soon
-out inspecting the vehicle, in which, for the
-next seven or eight hours, we were to have so
-close an interest. It was a curious-looking
-affair, very like an overgrown goat chaise, with a
-sort of roof or covering supported on iron rods,
-and containing two seats, each capable of accommodating
-with moderate comfort three persons,
-while there was room for another beside the
-driver. To this arrangement on wheels two
-strong rough-looking horses were attached, and
-standing by their heads was the driver, a stout
-man with a short neck, a weather-beaten face,
-and a red nose of goodly proportions.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-<p>There was a good deal of luggage to stow
-away, consisting of portmanteaus, theodolites,
-chains, tents, &amp;c., but at last everything was
-ready, and we started.</p>
-
-<p>For the first three or four miles all went
-well, except the dust which went down our
-throats and up our noses, till we could scarcely
-breathe. This was not likely to last long, however,
-for black clouds had been rolling up since
-early morning, and hanging in the sky like
-regiments taking position on a parade ground
-before a review. A break up of the weather
-was evidently imminent, and we thought with
-satisfaction of our roof, and bade defiance to
-the elements. Soon the aspect of the country,
-which had hitherto been flat, began to change,
-and the character of the road began to change
-with it, the former becoming undulating and
-the latter uneven. As we advanced the country
-became more broken, and the road problematical,
-and at last we found ourselves travelling along
-a sideling cut in the face of a range of high
-precipitous hills, in the valley at the foot of
-which the river Waikato was rushing, roaring,
-and tumbling in its rocky bed. The road, if
-it could be dignified with the name, was scarcely
-twelve feet wide, and sloped in places consider<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>ably
-towards the outer edge, while two hundred
-feet below us rushed the river. In some places
-landslips had occurred, and it was barely wide
-enough for the wheels of our conveyance; and,
-to make matters worse, the threatened rain had
-commenced to fall in torrents, rendering the
-clayey soil as slippery as possible.</p>
-
-<p>To say that the whole of the occupants of
-that buggy were not terribly nervous, would be
-to state a deliberate untruth. We all pretended
-to be quite at our ease, and I even tried to
-smoke a pipe, but our assumed composure was
-an utter fraud&mdash;indeed it was quite sufficient to
-see how we with one accord leant towards the
-hill, whenever the buggy wheel approached
-more nearly to the outer edge of the road, to
-be able to state positively that we were in a
-highly nervous condition. Old Jack, the driver,
-appeared to take things coolly enough; but he
-certainly had the best of it, for had the trap
-capsized he could have thrown himself off,
-while we, boxed up like sardines, must have
-gone over with it. He kept the horses going at
-a trot, wherever he could, and as they slid and
-stumbled onward, the blood-curdling thought
-would creep through my mind, that if one fell
-and slipped over the edge, he must drag us down
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>with him. It was like a fearful nightmare, and
-the only reassuring feature&mdash;or features&mdash;in it
-was old Jack's imperturbable countenance, as
-he sucked at his short clay and "klucked" at
-his horses.</p>
-
-<p>At last the agony was over; we were again
-on level ground; that awful rushing, roaring
-torrent had left us, and we breathed more freely.
-Old Jack now called a halt near a little brook
-to bait and water his horses, and we availed
-ourselves of the opportunity to dispose of the
-lunch&mdash;brought with us from the hotel&mdash;and
-began to converse again, a thing we had not
-thought of attempting to do for the last two
-hours or more.</p>
-
-<p>I inquired of Jack whether accidents often
-occurred on the part of the road we had lately
-left, and he replied that he only knew of one
-waggon going over the edge&mdash;the two horses
-were killed and the waggon dashed to pieces,
-but the driver, by throwing himself off, escaped
-with a broken arm. He, however, believed there
-had been another bit of a smash or two, but did
-not know particulars.</p>
-
-<p>Pushing forward again, we came to some
-extremely broken country, and old Jack's
-method of doing this portion, though it evinced
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>a certain amount of knowledge of the laws of
-mechanics, was simply agonising. Whenever
-we came to a steep incline with a corresponding
-rise, he would whip up the horses in order to
-try and obtain sufficient impetus to take us up
-the other side, and down the incline we would
-go at a fearful pace, jolting, bumping, and hanging
-on like grim death. How the springs stood
-it is a marvel to me. We very nearly came to
-grief once, for the wheels on one side of our
-conveyance suddenly sunk in a soft bog, and it
-almost overturned. With our united efforts, however,
-we succeeded in extricating the machine,
-and resumed our journey, which at last came to
-an end, as we pulled up considerably after dark
-before the door of a little hotel&mdash;almost the
-only building to be seen in this future Chicago.
-Although our arrival appeared to be quite
-unexpected, the landlord and his wife seemed
-perfectly equal to the occasion. The buggy was
-expeditiously emptied of its contents, and bedrooms
-were promptly shown us. While we
-were engaged in removing the signs of the
-late fearful expedition, the sounds of frizzling
-and spluttering, and the delightful odours that
-reached our olfactory nerves from the culinary
-department, conveyed to our minds the satisfactory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-assurance that provision for our exhausted
-frames of no mean order was under
-way, and served to confirm my opinion that
-our host and hostess were <em>quite</em> equal to the
-occasion.</p>
-
-<p>A hearty meal, followed by a pleasant chat,
-in a snug little sitting-room, with a bright
-coal fire burning in the grate, formed a most
-delightful close to what had been, to say the
-least of it, anything but a pleasant day's
-travelling.</p>
-
-<p>I was up betimes in the morning, and was
-woefully disappointed with the look of the
-country. Stretching in all directions was a vast
-undulating plain covered with stunted brown
-fern&mdash;not a blade of grass, not a green tree
-nor shrub was to be seen&mdash;nothing but brown
-fern. The hotel, the manager's house, a wooden
-shanty, some surveyors' tents, and a small hut
-alone broke the monotony of the view. In the
-extreme distance could be discerned ranges of
-high hills, but whether covered with trees or
-vegetation of any kind they were too far off
-to determine. Nothing seemed to be stirring
-either; no busy workmen were there laying
-out the streets of the future city or erecting
-houses for the future citizens; no sign of any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>thing
-going on. Nothing but brown fern. I
-had evidently arrived a quarter of a century
-too soon.</p>
-
-<p>I will not say anything of the quality of the
-land. It may have been first rate&mdash;in fact, I
-am inclined to think it must have been&mdash;for
-on inquiry I found the company demanded
-eight pounds per acre for suburban allotments
-two miles from the centre of the township.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_p_046.jpg" alt="" width="550" height="209" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Nothing but brown fern.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>To build the smallest house before a railway
-was made would cost seven hundred and fifty
-pounds, timber being twenty-five shillings per
-hundred feet. There was no wood for firing,
-and coals were eight pounds per ton. It was
-evidently no place for me, and the only thing
-left to determine was how to get back again.
-The landlord of the hotel, whom I consulted,
-told me that a waggon with stores and coal was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>expected in a day or two, and thought I would
-have no difficulty in arranging with the driver
-to go back in it. "To wait for the waggon," as
-the old refrain recommends, was therefore evidently
-the best way out of the difficulty, and I
-determined to do so. I called on the manager,
-and told him it would be impossible for me
-to settle there at present. He fully agreed with
-me, and advised my renting a small house in
-Cambridge until matters had become more
-advanced, when he promised to do all he could.
-He feared, however, it might be some time before
-he could be of any use to me, and I must
-say I feared so too. However, I thought it
-would be better to follow his advice, and determined
-on another house hunt when I reached
-Cambridge. I spent the rest of the day with
-him, and in the evening strolled back to the
-hotel, which was about three quarters of a mile
-off, being solely guided to it by its light, as there
-was no road or track of any kind.</p>
-
-<p>On my way I was startled by hearing the most
-hideous noises at some distance from me, but
-gradually growing nearer. They evidently proceeded
-from human throats: what could it
-mean? Louder and louder grew the fearful
-sounds, until at last I could make out a party of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>men on horseback, who, on their nearer approach,
-I found to be Maoris. They passed me without
-notice, still keeping up the horrible din, and
-I came to the conclusion that they must have
-been imbibing too freely at the hotel. On
-arriving there, I mentioned the matter to the
-landlord, and he told me that they were
-natives from the King country who had come
-over to buy some stores, and that they were
-making the noises I heard to drive away "the
-Taipo," a sort of devil who devotes his attention
-exclusively to Maoris, over whom, however, he
-only possesses power at night. The Maoris, I
-learnt, would never go out singly after dark, and
-when they ventured in company, gave utterance
-to the unearthly cries I have described to keep
-him away; and it strikes me that if "the Taipo"
-has anything like a correct ear, the method
-adopted ought to be most effectual.</p>
-
-<p>Two days passed, and on the afternoon of
-the third the waggon appeared. It had been
-detained on the road through a breakdown, and
-the driver had been obliged to spend a night in
-the open air, which, as the weather was now
-extremely cold, must have been anything but
-pleasant. He had succeeded in repairing
-damages in the morning, for, with a cautiousness
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>begotten probably by previous catastrophes, he
-had with him the necessary tools, and was
-enabled to complete his journey. My proposal
-to accompany him on his return was favourably
-received, particularly as I agreed to pay a pound
-for the privilege, and on the following morning
-we started.</p>
-
-<p>After over nine hours of torture, mental and
-bodily, for the waggon was innocent of springs,
-Cambridge was reached; and I was once more
-installed in the comfortable hotel there.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>THE "TERROR."</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">House</span> hunting is not usually exciting sport, no
-matter how plentiful the game may be, and
-Cambridge I found very badly stocked. I
-travelled, I believe, over every inch of the
-scattered town, which has a population of about
-sixteen hundred, saw some places for sale, the
-prices asked being far beyond my purse, and
-inquired in almost every shop for houses to let,
-but without success.</p>
-
-<p>I had almost given up in despair, when I
-struck what I thought was a good scent, which
-landed me in a shoemaker's shop, where I
-found the proprietor, a mild-looking, bald-headed
-little man, spectacled, and leather aproned, hammering
-away at a boot.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe you have a small house to let?"
-I commenced.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I has and I hasn't!" the old man
-responded. "You see, I has a place, but it's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>got a tenant, and she's a queer 'un to deal
-with!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you can't let your house twice over,"
-I interrupted rather shortly, thinking the old
-fellow was making fun of me; "so there is an
-end to the matter!"</p>
-
-<p>"Hold on a bit!" returned the patriarch.
-"I've given this here widder notice to quit, for
-I can't get no rent out of her, but lor! she don't
-care no more for notices than nothing at all!"</p>
-
-<p>"But has she a lease?" I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>"Lease indeed!" quoth the ancient one
-indignantly. "Cock <i>her</i> up with a lease!
-Why, she's only a weekly tenant, but, my word,
-she's a terror!"</p>
-
-<p>"If she won't pay, there should be no difficulty
-in getting rid of her," I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>"May be not! may be not!" he answered
-slowly, and in unconvinced tones; "but you don't
-know her. She's a terror! my word! she <i>is</i> a
-terror! But I tell you what," he continued,
-brightening up; "you go and say you heard
-she was going away, and you would like to see
-the place. I'll show you the way."</p>
-
-<p>"Don't you think it would be better for you
-to see her yourself and arrange matters?" I
-queried.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-<p>"Me see her!&mdash;me arrange matters with
-her!" he screamed; "catch me at it. Me and
-the widder don't hit it at all, and she's a regler
-terror, she is. But you're all right though; she
-will be civil enough to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well then," I reluctantly consented;
-and off we set for the abode of the formidable
-widow, and soon arrived before a little cottage
-with a piece of waste ground in front, shut off
-from the road by a hedge and a gate.</p>
-
-<p>The shoemaker concealed himself behind the
-hedge, while I entered the gate and knocked
-at the cottage door, which was opened almost
-instantaneously by a tall, hard-featured, middle-aged
-female in a widow's cap. The door opened
-direct into the sitting-room, without the intervention
-of a hall or passage, and I was
-undoubtedly face to face with "the terror"
-herself. Fully sensible of my position, I raised
-my hat, and addressed her as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I must ask pardon for my intrusion, but
-hearing that you were about to change your
-residence, I"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Change my ressidence! And may I make so
-bold as to hask who informed you I was going
-to change my res-si-dence?" she interrupted,
-tossing her head, and scornfully eyeing me.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-<p>"I understood so from your landlord this
-morning," I meekly responded.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! you did, did yer! Well, you can tell that bald-headed,
-goggling, mean little humbug of a cobbler that he's labouring under a
-miscomprehension!" With that the awful female banged the door in my
-face, and thus brought to an end my house-hunting in Cambridge. No
-sign of the cobbler could I see&mdash;he had evidently overheard "the
-terror's" concluding words and bolted.</p>
-
-<p>I went back to my hotel dejected and out
-of spirits. On entering the reading-room, I
-found two gentlemen installed there&mdash;evidently
-new arrivals&mdash;who were smoking cigarettes and
-perusing newspapers. The younger one, a man
-of about thirty-five years of age, with a full
-beard and moustache, shortly after my entrance
-handed me the paper he had been studying,
-saying, "Perhaps you would like to see the
-<cite>Auckland Star</cite>, just arrived by the evening
-train."</p>
-
-<p>I thanked him, and ran my eye over its
-columns. I did not take much interest in the
-New Zealand papers at that time, so was easily
-satisfied, and passed the paper on to the other
-occupant of the room, an elderly gentleman
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>with a jovial countenance, whom the younger
-addressed as Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Acquaintances are soon made in New Zealand
-hotels, and in a very short time we were all
-three chatting as though we had known one
-another for months.</p>
-
-<p>"Not long out from home?" questioned the
-bearded gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>"Only landed in Auckland on the third of
-July," I responded.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you think of the colony?" was
-the next question.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I hardly like to express an opinion
-yet, but I certainly am not favourably impressed
-with the part I have just come from," I rejoined,
-naming the locality, "and feel half inclined to
-go back to the old country."</p>
-
-<p>"Your disappointment does not surprise me,"
-returned my companion. "By Jove, sir, the
-way land companies and the banks have caused
-this part of the colony to be puffed up, has done
-more harm to New Zealand than anything else.
-I would not live here if they <i>gave</i> me a house.
-You can't go out without being choked with
-dust when the weather's dry, and there is positively
-nothing attractive in the whole place.
-Now, where I live, it is altogether different.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>Beautiful country! virgin forests! an inland
-sea alive with fish&mdash;nice society&mdash;fishing, shooting,
-pig hunting, sailing&mdash;everything a man can
-wish for. It's a grand country&mdash;a <em>grand</em> country,
-sir. Ah! that is a place worth living in; but
-this&mdash;bah!" Here he paused to relight his
-cigarette, which in his enthusiasm he had
-allowed to go out.</p>
-
-<p>Seizing the opportunity, I exclaimed&mdash;"I have
-no doubt it is all you describe, but I am a civil
-engineer, possessing very limited means, and
-anxious to get work, so fear it would never do
-or me."</p>
-
-<p>"Never do for you&mdash;why not?" resumed my
-hairy interlocutor. "Far better chance of getting
-occupation there than you'll ever have here. Just
-where your chance lies. County Council got no
-proper engineer&mdash;you on the spot&mdash;make your
-application&mdash;produce your testimonials, and the
-thing's done. Tell you what&mdash;I am going up
-here in about a fortnight; you come up with
-me. I'll put you up and show you the country.
-Know a property that will just suit you&mdash;lovely
-place&mdash;dirt cheap, sir! Good house&mdash;orchards&mdash;beautiful
-views&mdash;grand, sir&mdash;grand!"</p>
-
-<p>"What is the district called, and how far
-is it from Auckland?" I questioned.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-<p>"The Kaipara&mdash;the Eden of the north island,
-sir! and not more than ninety miles from
-Auckland&mdash;thirty by rail and sixty by steamer,"
-replied my new acquaintance. "Delightful trip
-the water part. Don't think much of the railway
-part&mdash;never did like the railway&mdash;have too
-much of it perhaps&mdash;wretched accommodation&mdash;jerked
-and bumped nearly to death. Give
-me the water!" he proceeded enthusiastically.
-"Ah! when you've seen the Kaipara, you'll say
-it's lovely; I know you will. Take my advice,
-and come up with me!"</p>
-
-<p>I thanked him for his kind offer, which I
-promised to take into serious consideration,
-and writing my Auckland address on my card, I
-asked him to call when he reached town, and I
-would then be prepared with an answer. He
-promised to do so, and at that moment the first
-bell ringing from the dining-room, warned us
-to get ready for the evening meal.</p>
-
-<p>Having no further business to transact in
-Cambridge, I took the first train on the following
-morning for Auckland, which I reached in
-due course, and spent the evening detailing my
-adventures to my wife, and in consultation with
-her as to the best course for us to pursue. It
-seemed evident we must give up, at any rate for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>a time, the idea with which we left England,
-and it was equally clear that in order to live
-within my income I must buy a place with the
-few loose hundreds I had brought out, where
-I could keep a cow or two, and save rent, milk,
-and butter. I decided, therefore, to look at
-places that were for sale about Auckland so
-as to help me to come to a decision before
-my friend of the Cambridge hotel put in an
-appearance.</p>
-
-<p>I had looked over one property at Cambridge, which comprised a
-six-roomed house, and eight acres of land. The house was in very bad
-condition&mdash;quite uninhabitable indeed; and for it and the eight
-acres I was asked one thousand pounds.</p>
-
-<p>I saw several about Auckland, but could find
-nothing to suit me. My wife and I took a good
-many excursions together in this pursuit, but
-without avail. We also made some pleasure
-trips, one of which was to Mount Eden, lying
-directly behind the city. An easy ascent of
-between three and four hundred feet brought
-us to the lip of the crater, from which a magnificent
-view of the isthmus of Auckland and the
-surrounding country is to be obtained, the great
-number of volcanic cones visible forming a very
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>remarkable feature in the landscape. They
-are, I believe, over sixty in number, and range
-in height from three hundred to nine hundred
-feet. No tradition exists among the Maoris of
-any eruption in the neighbourhood, though the
-fact that the Maori name for the highest peak,
-Rangitoto, means sky of blood, seems to imply
-that it has been active within their time.</p>
-
-<p>The inside of the crater of Mount Eden
-resembles a funnel or inverted cone covered
-with grass and plentifully strewn with lumps of
-scoria. It is very symmetrical in shape, and
-one would almost fancy it an artificial creation.
-There is indeed plenty of evidence of the work
-of human hands on Mount Eden in the shape
-of remains of Maori fortifications, though the
-natural and the artificial are so blended together
-and softened by time that it is difficult
-to say where the one ends and the other
-begins.</p>
-
-<p>When we had satisfied our appetites for landscape
-scenery, we descended the Mount, and
-spent some time examining the neighbourhood
-in the vain hope of tumbling across a place
-to be sold that would suit us. We were much
-struck with the elegant timber villa residences,
-surrounded by spacious verandahs, about which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>flowering creeping plants of various kinds, such
-as the yellow Banksian rose and the passion
-fruit with its splendid scarlet flower, climbed and
-hung in luxurious festoons. Some of the villas
-possessed gardens filled with beautiful flowers,
-including camelias, azaleas, spirœas, and many
-others only to be found in conservatories in
-England. Everywhere in the province of Auckland
-flowers of all kinds not only grow but
-flower most luxuriantly, and the lover of floriculture
-can indulge his hobby to the full.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A SALE BY AUCTION.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">It</span> does not often fall to my lot to do shopping&mdash;one
-reason being that my wife is fond of doing it
-herself, and another that I detest the occupation.
-It happened, however, a few mornings after
-our Mount Eden trip, that some mutton chops
-were required, and as I was going into the town,
-my wife asked me to purchase three or four.
-To avoid the possibility of forgetting my commission,
-I headed straight for the flashiest-looking
-butcher's shop in Queen Street, gave my
-order, and on receiving the chops handed half-a-crown
-to the shopman, who to my intense
-surprise returned me a two-shilling piece.</p>
-
-<p>Four fine mutton chops for sixpence! Digest this information, my
-home readers, and then come out here if you like, and digest the
-three-halfpenny chops&mdash;they are every bit as good as English ones,
-and one-fifth of the money.</p>
-
-<p>Strolling down Queen Street with my purchases<span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span> done up in a neat
-parcel, I was nearly knocked over by a man who suddenly rushed out
-of a doorway with a gigantic bell in his hand, which he commenced
-ringing violently. "What is the matter now?" thought I. "Can this be an
-opposition form of religion to the Salvation Army, in which the bell
-takes the place of the drum?" Determining to fathom the mystery of
-the man with the bell, I stationed myself as near to him as possible
-without running a risk of being rendered deaf for life, and watched
-events. Nobody appeared to take much notice of the performance, but
-I saw people from time to time entering the doorway from which the
-bellringer had emerged. "No doubt," I thought, "some kind of service
-is about to be held;" and I determined when the bell stopped to form
-one of the congregation. People were now flocking in pretty fast, and
-the bellman showed symptoms of fatigue, though he stuck to his work
-with all the ardour of a religious fanatic. At last the bell conquered
-the man, and entering the doorway I found myself in a large and rather
-dark room, along one side of which all sorts of articles of furniture
-were arranged. On a small raised platform with a rail in front,
-to which a desk was attached, stood a gentleman whom I immediately<span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-saw was not a parson, but an auctioneer, for in his hand he carried
-his baton of office&mdash;a small ivory hammer. Round him were crowded
-about one hundred shabbily dressed persons, a large proportion of whom
-were Jews. Just as I entered the auctioneer rapped sharply with his
-mallet on the desk in front of him and spoke as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Gentlemen, I have to-day to offer you some
-of the choicest articles of furniture that have
-ever come under my hammer, and I will but
-express the hope that you have brought with
-you plenty of money to buy with, and plenty of
-pluck to bid with, and proceed to business.
-Jim, move that chest of drawers forward, so
-that the gentlemen can see it. There, gentlemen,
-what do you say to that? a piece of furniture
-that would give a distinguished appearance
-to the meanest bedchamber&mdash;best cabinetmaker's
-work too. Shall we say five pounds
-for the chest of drawers? What, no bidders?
-Well, start it at what you like&mdash;say ten shillings
-for this magnificent piece of furniture&mdash;twelve
-shillings&mdash;fourteen shillings&mdash;one pound bid in
-two places&mdash;this remarkably handsome specimen
-of cabinetmaker's work going for one pound&mdash;twenty-five
-shillings bid," &amp;c. &amp;c., until it was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>finally knocked down for fifty shillings. The
-next thing disposed of was a clock, and then a
-sewing-machine was put up, which was just the
-thing I knew my wife wanted.</p>
-
-<p>"Gentlemen," said the auctioneer, "the sewing-machine
-I now have to offer to you is the property
-of a widow lady in distressed circumstances. I
-will with your permission read a letter I received
-from her at the time the machine was forwarded
-to me, and I am confident that you will sympathise
-with this poor bereaved lady, who has not
-only had the misfortune to lose her husband,
-but is now, alas! about to lose her sewing-machine!"
-He then read the letter, the contents
-of which I have forgotten, though I recollect
-it stated that the machine was a "Wheeler
-and Wilson" in good order.</p>
-
-<p>"Gentlemen," continued the auctioneer, "I
-am sure the letter I have just read must have
-excited feelings of compassion in each manly
-breast. Show it by bidding freely for the
-widow&mdash;or rather, I mean for the widow's
-sewing-machine. Shall we start it at a pound?
-What! no bid at a pound? Where are your
-bowels of compassion, gentlemen? Well, say
-ten shillings&mdash;ten shillings for a 'Wheeler and
-Wilson' sewing-machine&mdash;fifteen shillings for
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>this splendid piece of mechanism&mdash;sixteen shillings
-offered&mdash;sixteen shillings for a beautiful
-widow's sewing-machine&mdash;seventeen shillings
-offered&mdash;eighteen shillings in two places for the
-widow&mdash;nineteen shillings&mdash;in perfect working
-order&mdash;one pound offered for this beautiful
-machine of a lone widow in good working order
-one pound two and six offered&mdash;any advance
-on one pound two and six?"</p>
-
-<p>"One pound five!" I shouted; and the second
-after down came the hammer, and the machine
-as my property. It was moved away by Jim
-into a little sideroom, and the auctioneer took
-down my name.</p>
-
-<p>I went to inspect my purchase, and to my
-disgust found it would not move, and also discovered
-it was not a "Wheeler and Wilson"
-at all. Catching sight of Jim, who was no
-other than the performer on the bell, I said&mdash;"Look
-here, my man, this is not a 'Wheeler
-and Wilson' machine at all, and it is all rusty
-and won't work!"</p>
-
-<p>"Can't help it, sir," replied Jim. "When
-you buys at auctions, you buys for weal or
-woe!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! the wheel's right enough, and there is
-no question about the whoa," I sarcastically
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>remarked, "for it won't move an inch; but I
-will not pay for it; it's not a 'Wheeler and
-Wilson,' as the auctioneer stated!" and in a
-state of righteous indignation I strode out of the
-place, leaving my chops unwittingly behind me.</p>
-
-<p>There are eight or nine of these rooms, or
-marts, in Queen Street, and the system of selling
-all sorts of things daily by auction gives
-a sort of Cheap Jack air to the thoroughfare.
-Surely, if this method of disposing of goods of
-all descriptions is necessary to the happiness of
-the good citizens of Auckland, some side street
-might be selected in which the business could
-be carried on, and the peace and dignity of
-the principal thoroughfare in the city left undisturbed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>THE FAITHLESS MARY ANN.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">One</span> evening, shortly after my adventures in the
-auction room, the servant girl we had brought
-from England with us asked my wife's permission
-to go out for an hour or two. This was
-readily granted, and no more was thought of
-the matter until ten o'clock came, and with it
-no sign of Mary Ann. She had promised to
-return by nine, and was usually fairly punctual.
-We sat up waiting until eleven, wondering what
-could have happened, and then, deciding to give
-her up for the night, retired to bed.</p>
-
-<p>On the following morning there was still no
-sign of the girl, so I hurried down to the police
-station to ascertain if the inspector could assist
-me to obtain tidings of her. An interview with
-the sergeant in charge proved to me conclusively
-that Mary Ann as a speculation in servant girls
-was an utter failure, resulting in a dead loss to
-me of £50. He told me the police could do nothing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>unless a charge of a criminal nature was
-entered. I produced a document stamped a
-Somerset House, in which the girl agreed to
-remain in my service for three years at a specified
-rate of wages, on condition of my paying
-for her outfit and passage, and assured the
-sergeant that I had fulfilled my part of the
-agreement in every particular, giving her a most
-complete outfit and paying for a saloon passage.
-He, however, immediately floored my hopes in
-the document by telling me that no agreement
-of the kind signed in England was binding
-in the colony, and that to have made it so it
-should have been again signed before witnesses
-on reaching New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>"No doubt," he said, "your servant acquainted
-herself with this fact, and has run
-away in order to secure the high wages to be
-obtained in the colony, though possibly there
-may be a sweetheart in the case."</p>
-
-<p>I assured him I did not think the latter at
-all likely, as one reason for her selection was
-her excessive plainness, which we considered
-sufficient to keep every man in New Zealand
-at a safe distance.</p>
-
-<p>He remarked that she must indeed be a "rum
-'un" to look at, if she could not find a chap in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>New Zealand, for they weren't very particular;
-and regretting that he could not assist me, the
-interview came to an end, and I returned home
-in the hopes of learning some tidings there of
-the truant.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing, however, had been heard of her,
-though my wife had made a discovery in connection
-with her box, which at first sight appeared
-full of clothes, a waterproof cloak lying at the
-top. On removing this cloak, however, pieces
-of sacking and old rags were disclosed, and
-proved its sole contents.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Ann had evidently been taking away
-her things by degrees, carrying something away,
-probably, whenever she had had an evening
-out; and in case her box might be inspected,
-had kept it apparently full of things by stuffing
-in old rags under cover of the waterproof
-cloak. Oh! faithless Mary Ann. Your artfulness
-exceeded your ugliness, and our credulity
-exceeded both!</p>
-
-<p>I trust the experience narrated above may
-be of use to persons bringing servant girls out
-from the old country, and will show the necessity
-of getting an agreement signed as soon as
-the colony is reached.</p>
-
-<p>My readers will probably agree with me that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>the New Zealand law as expounded by the
-police sergeant is a most absurd and one-sided
-one, placing the master altogether in the servant's
-hands, as he has to find the money for
-her passage, and probably, as in my case, for her
-outfit as well, while he has only her word to
-rely on in return. It is not, however, the only
-law in New Zealand that requires alteration.</p>
-
-<p>We were now servantless, and until we could
-arrange about extraneous help it became necessary
-to investigate and to undertake those
-operations which comprise the duties of a
-general servant. My wife assumed of course
-the lead, and I seconded her to the best of my
-abilities&mdash;cooking, bed making, floor sweeping,
-chair dusting, fire lighting, potato peeling, and
-many other accomplishments of which up to
-that date we had had only a sort of vague conception,
-were now brought prominently under
-our notice, and became to us terrible realities.</p>
-
-<p>I advertised in the <cite>Herald</cite> and <cite>Star</cite> newspapers
-for a servant girl, and several responded,
-but none proved suitable, the wages asked
-averaging from twelve to sixteen shillings per
-week. Two, but lately arrived in New Zealand,
-called together one morning. My wife interrogated
-them. Neither knew anything of cookery,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>could not wash, and had very dim notions of a
-housemaid's duties.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, you could not have been getting more
-than eighteenpence a week each in England?"
-my wife exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps not," one of them returned impudently;
-"but we ain't come all this way across
-the sea for sich wages as them. We wants
-twelve shillings a week, and a hevening hout
-when we likes, and neither on us won't go
-nowhere for no less."</p>
-
-<p>Further questioning after the delivery of this
-ultimatum was superfluous, and my wife hastened
-their departure.</p>
-
-<p>Servant girls, or "helps," as they prefer to be
-called, have a nice time of it at present in New
-Zealand. They demand extortionate wages, and
-dictate almost entirely their own terms. No
-character is ever demanded when application
-for a situation is made; to ask for one would
-probably bring the interview to an abrupt end.
-Latterly, Lady Jervois, the wife of his Excellency
-the Governor, has shown a great interest in a
-capital institution called the "Girls' Friendly
-Society," with which none but girls of good
-character are connected; and if ladies would
-make up their minds only to take girls through
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>this Society, a very different class of servants
-would eventually become established in New
-Zealand. We at last succeeded in securing the
-services of a married woman for the daytime
-only, and were again fairly comfortable.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>MY INTRODUCTION TO KAIPARA.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">One</span> evening, about three weeks after my return
-from Cambridge, a hansom cab drew up at our
-door, and from it descended my bearded friend
-of the Cambridge hotel. I introduced him to my
-wife, to whom, when he was comfortably seated,
-with a refreshing beverage before him, he gave
-a glowing description of the Kaipara district.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" he exclaimed, with fervour, "when
-the time comes, as come it surely will, when
-people will exercise their own judgments, and
-not be led away by flaming puffs in the newspapers,
-or by extravagant reports made in the
-interest of land companies, then the North
-Kaipara will assume its proper position in New
-Zealand, and be known throughout the length
-and breadth of the land as the Eden of the
-North! You think me over enthusiastic, no
-doubt; but wait until your husband has returned
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>from his visit, and he will be just as enthusiastic
-as I am."</p>
-
-<p>"But do you think he will be able to get
-work to do there?" questioned my wife.</p>
-
-<p>"Could not have a better chance. Sure to
-drop into the county engineership. Just the
-man they want. Any amount of work to be
-done&mdash;bridges, roads, and that sort of thing to
-be made; and, by the by, I am going to start
-a fish-preserving industry&mdash;a grand scheme&mdash;thousands
-of pounds to be made at it; got
-hold of a German preparation that will preserve
-anything. Have a partner in the Waikato
-district who has arranged sale for any amount
-of fish down there. I'm taking up a lot of tubs
-and German preparation to the Kaipara with me.
-If you settle up there, I'll make your husband
-manager until county engineership turns up."</p>
-
-<p>And so it was determined that I should spend
-a visit of a week's duration in the Northern
-Kaipara, and examine the property that was for
-sale. My portmanteau was therefore once more
-brought into requisition, and on the following
-Monday afternoon we took our seats in the
-train for Helensville, the terminus of the
-Northern line, from whence a steamer would
-convey us to our destination.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-<p>The railway journey was decidedly uninteresting,
-the line passing through some most dreary
-looking country, which became more uninviting
-as we neared Helensville, a township only impressive
-by its unsightliness. It stands on a
-river whose discoloured waters run between two
-banks of mud.</p>
-
-<p>"Surely my bearded friend has been indulging
-in unlimited quantities of the colonial amusement
-known as 'gassing,'" I thought; and feeling
-very much tempted to return to Auckland,
-I expressed my opinion to my companion pretty
-freely.</p>
-
-<p>"I fully expected some remarks of the kind&mdash;fully
-expected them," he replied. "That
-wretched journey to Helensville is in a great
-measure responsible for so little being known of
-the North Kaipara. People come up as far as
-here, and are so disgusted that they turn back.
-Wait, however, till we have crossed the Kaipara
-Harbour, and then give me your opinion. I
-fancy it will have undergone a change, sir.
-Yes; I <em>rather</em> fancy so. All I ask you is to
-wait."</p>
-
-<p>We slept that night at an hotel near the
-railway station, and were aroused from our
-slumbers about three o'clock in the morning,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>and told to "hurry up," as the boat was ready
-to start. After hasty ablutions, therefore, we
-struggled into our clothes, and speedily transferred
-ourselves to the deck of the <em>Kina</em>, a
-screw steamboat of fifty-three tons register,
-which was making noise enough with her
-horrible whistle and horn for a two thousand
-tonner.</p>
-
-<p>We steamed away between the mud banks,
-which gradually widened out, and at last disappeared
-altogether as the Kaipara Harbour
-was reached. This we crossed in about two
-hours, and steered for one of the many armlets
-of this inland sea, which intersect the Kaipara
-district in so peculiar a manner.</p>
-
-<p>The formation of the Northern Kaipara is
-indeed remarkable, and looks as though the
-land at some distant period had cracked and
-opened from the harbour in different directions,
-allowing the sea to rush in and form the
-beautiful creeks which everywhere abound.
-While crossing the harbour, my opinion, as
-prophesied by my companion and guide, began
-to undergo a change. The scenery there
-was very pretty; but when we were fairly in
-the armlet, which leads with many windings
-and turns to Pahi and Matakohe, I became
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>thoroughly charmed. The virgin forests were
-there true enough&mdash;the native trees reaching
-to the very water's edge, with their hanging
-branches kissing its placid surface. Ferns in
-numberless variety&mdash;ranging from the gigantic
-tree fern with stem of twenty feet down to
-the dainty maiden hair, together with Nikau
-and cabbage palms&mdash;fringed the banks, and
-mingled with the darker green of the pohutukawa
-and other trees: at times bold grass-crowned
-bluffs of sand or lime stone met
-our view, giving place again to lovely little
-bays with bright shelly beaches and grassy
-slopes: ever and anon on either shore one
-caught glimpses of neat wooden houses, peeping
-out of nests of pine and gum trees, and
-surrounded by green fields of waving manuka&mdash;a
-background of high forest-covered hills
-completing the picture.</p>
-
-<p>I was enraptured. After my recent experience of New Zealand scenery
-it appeared to me perfection, and I was prepared fully to indorse my
-companion's remark that the North Kaipara was a place worth living
-in.</p>
-
-<p>The water teemed with fish, which were jumping in every
-direction, while birds of various kinds, including duck, teal,
-shags, eel-hawks,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77"
-id="Page_77">[77]</a></span> and flocks of godwit and red-shanked
-plover, added further life to the scene.</p>
-
-<p>At last the township of Pahi&mdash;where my friend resided&mdash;was
-reached, and on the steamer mooring to the wharf we landed.</p>
-
-<p>I was most hospitably entertained for a
-couple of days, and introduced to many of the
-settlers residing in the locality; and on the
-third day a visit to the gentleman with whom
-my companion had arranged I should spend a
-short time was undertaken. We left Pahi in
-a flat-bottomed punt, about fifteen feet long,
-painted black, and possessing an uncomfortable
-resemblance to a coffin with the lid off. The
-forward thwart, in which I noticed a split, was
-pierced for a mast; there was a seat about the
-centre of the boat for the rower, and another in
-the stern. Two large tubs and a package containing
-the German preserving preparation occupied
-the fore part of the cranky concern, while our
-portmanteaus were placed in the stern, and
-with a pair of sculls and a broken oar, to which
-a small sail was attached, completed the equipment.
-With some misgiving I stepped in, and
-we pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you going to row?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh no, we'll sail&mdash;rowing is a waste of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>labour when you've got any wind," replied my
-companion, as he adjusted the stump of the oar
-in the hole in the damaged thwart. "You sit
-on the weather gunwale to keep her trim, and
-we shall be across in no time," he continued,
-seating himself in the stern, and steering by
-means of a scull.</p>
-
-<p>We found a pretty strong breeze blowing
-when we got well off the land, but the punt sat
-stiff enough with my weight on the weather
-gunwale, and we were going along at a grand
-rate, when an ominous crack was heard, and over
-went mast and sail on our lee-side as the damaged
-thwart gave way, whilst down went the weather
-gunwale with me on it. We did not upset, but
-we took in a good deal of water, and the bottom
-of my coat and a portion of my trousers were
-saturated. My friend, after an ineffectual attempt
-to reinstate the mast, applied himself to the oars,
-with the remark that "it was confounded bad
-luck," and in a short time we landed in a remarkably
-pretty bay with a white shelly beach.</p>
-
-<p>My friend's friend, Mr. M&mdash;&mdash;, was there to
-meet us, and received me most kindly, saying he
-was extremely happy to make my acquaintance,
-and hoped I would stay with him as long as I
-could. He promised to give me some fishing,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>flat fish spearing, and pig hunting, and to take
-me to see the property to be sold, which, it appeared,
-belonged to my bearded friend's brother-in-law.
-I thanked him heartily, and at the
-same time expressed my fear that I had been
-guilty of considerable coolness in thus taking
-his house by storm, adding, "My friend here,
-however, must share the blame with me."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! you don't know us up here, or you would
-never trouble your head about the matter: we're
-only too delighted to see you, and will do our
-utmost to make your visit an enjoyable one,"
-returned my host; and thus commenced an
-agreeable acquaintance, which, I am happy to
-say, continues to the present time.</p>
-
-<p>Following him up a steep path winding in and
-out among high bushes of New Zealand flax,
-cabbage palms, fir, acacia, peach, and loquat
-trees, the house was reached, at an elevation
-of some sixty feet above sea level, and I was
-speedily placed on a friendly footing with my
-host's family, which consisted of his wife, five
-children, and a governess.</p>
-
-<p>In pleasant conversation the evening slipped
-away, and before we retired to rest, a programme,
-embracing a visit to the property for sale, a wild
-pig hunt, and a day's fishing, was drawn up.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A WILD PIG HUNT.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Next</span> morning, after an ample, and, I may say,
-luxurious breakfast, pipes were lighted and a
-start made for the property to be inspected&mdash;distant
-about three quarters of a mile&mdash;to reach
-which another trip on the water had to be
-undertaken. A punt belonging to my host was
-got under weigh, and with two good men at the
-oars the journey was quickly accomplished, the
-latter part of our row being along a bank shaded
-by willow and other trees.</p>
-
-<p>We landed on a limestone beach, and a sloping
-ascent covered with tall grass brought us to
-the house. It possessed six rooms, and a passage
-running the entire depth, terminating a
-each end with a door. The sitting-room and
-but one bedroom were lined and papered, and
-the rest of the house was only in a half finished
-state. A verandah ran round three sides of it,
-but part of the flooring was wanting: to make
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>the house comfortable a considerable outlay was
-required. The outdoor portion of the property
-consisted of two orchards, containing together
-three hundred and sixty fruit trees. In one
-of them were a number of well-grown peach
-trees covered with blossom, together with some
-orange, lemon, and other sub-tropical trees.
-The second orchard&mdash;about two acres in extent&mdash;was
-filled with apple and plum trees three
-or four years old. A grass paddock of fifteen
-acres enclosed by a wire fence, a stockyard and
-pigsties, three or four acres of very pretty bush
-fenced in and bordered on one side by the
-water, and an acre or two of grass land about
-the house planted with ornamental trees and
-flowering shrubs of various kinds, completed
-the property, for which four hundred pounds
-was asked.</p>
-
-<p>The view of the Kaipara from the verandah
-was lovely, and altogether I was extremely
-pleased with the place, though it was evident
-that the aid of a carpenter and painter would
-be required to make the house habitable. I
-determined, therefore, to think the matter over
-well and to ascertain the cost of completing the
-house before making any offer.</p>
-
-<p>The inspection over, we returned in the punt,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>and after lunch strolled over part of my host's
-farm of between four and five hundred acres.
-On the next day a pig hunt in the bush was
-arranged, in which Mr. C&mdash;&mdash;, a sporting bachelor
-residing in the neighbourhood, was invited to
-participate. My bearded friend did not accompany
-us. We started about eleven in the morning,
-my host carrying a gun, Mr. C&mdash;&mdash; an
-axe and a butcher's knife, and myself a tomahawk.
-Three pig dogs&mdash;a breed, I think, between
-the bull and the collie&mdash;followed at our
-heels, and after walking about three quarters
-of a mile we entered the bush.</p>
-
-<p>How comes it, I wonder, that the magnificent
-New Zealand forests are stigmatised with the
-name of "bush." If we turn to the dictionary
-we find that bush means a thick shrub. The
-forests here, however, are composed principally
-of gigantic trees, not thick shrubs, and to give
-them such an unworthy name is only misleading.
-No scenery of the kind in any part of the
-world can excel in beauty the forests of New
-Zealand, and it is much to be deplored that they
-are not dignified with a more befitting title.</p>
-
-<p>The ground where we stood was clothed with ferns and mosses
-in endless variety. Immense trees stood here and there, whose
-moss and fern-covered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83"
-id="Page_83">[83]</a></span> trunks rose to a height of sixty or
-seventy feet, and then broke into a crown of branches which met and
-interlaced overhead, forming a canopy through which the light of day
-but dimly penetrated.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_083.jpg" alt="" width="460" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Heavy Bush, Matakohe.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nikau palms, tree ferns, and small native
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>flowering trees grew between these giants, and
-from their branches hung clusters of lovely
-white clematis, bush lawyers, supplejacks, and
-other climbing plants. Although it was blowing
-freshly when we entered, not a breath of
-wind could now be felt, nor a sound heard,
-except the glorious deep note of the Tui&mdash;or
-parson bird&mdash;the harsh cry of the New Zealand
-parrot, and the gentle cooing of the pigeon.
-About us fluttered numbers of the bushman's
-little feathered friends&mdash;the fantails&mdash;spreading
-their large white fan-shaped tails as they darted
-hither and thither, and flew fearlessly within two
-feet of us. It seemed almost sacrilege to disturb
-the beautiful solemnity, but we had come
-to hunt wild pigs, and hunt them we must. My
-new sporting acquaintance was impatient, so
-away we went, the dogs heading us, and disappearing
-out of sight. We wandered on for
-some time in silence, listening for the dogs.
-At last one gave tongue, and we hastened in
-its direction; again the sound faintly rose, and
-shortly afterwards, further to our right, a distant
-noise of yelping, barking, and grunting reached
-our ears.</p>
-
-<p>"Come along! they have got a pig bailed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>up!" cried Mr. C&mdash;&mdash; excitedly, as he plunged
-out of sight in the thick undergrowth, quickly
-followed by my host and myself.</p>
-
-<p>I found rapid bush travelling by no mean
-easy of accomplishment. At one moment my
-legs were caught in a supplejack, from which
-I would get clear, only to find myself firmly
-hooked by the claw-shaped thorns of the bush
-lawyer; then after a desperate struggle and
-many scratches would escape from its clutches,
-to become entangled the next minute in a bunch
-of Mangi-mangi, a fine wiry-stemmed creeper,
-which hangs in clusters from the trees.</p>
-
-<p>I ascertained afterwards that my companions
-carried pocket knives, and cut away the obstacles
-as they presented themselves. Being heavily
-handicapped by my inexperience, I arrived at
-the scene of action a bad third, though in time
-to see the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coup-de-grâce</i> given by my host to
-a small pig which one of the dogs had seized
-by the ear while the other two were barking a
-chorus of approval.</p>
-
-<p>The animal being pronounced a good subject
-for discussion at the dinner table, was dressed on
-the spot by my two companions, and hung up in
-a tree with a piece of flax&mdash;a capital substitute
-for a rope&mdash;to await our return. A fresh start
-was then made, and the raid against the pigs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>prosecuted with vigour. The dogs seemed
-delighted with their success, and anxious to
-secure fresh laurels. In a short time a more
-open part of the forest was reached, and here
-the dogs started three large boars, which came
-tearing through the trees with bristles erect. A
-bullet from my host's gun slightly wounded one
-of them, and he turned and charged towards us,
-grinding his tusks in his rage. To reach us he
-had to cross a small gully with steep banks,
-and this he was no sooner in than a dog had
-him by each ear. He succeeded in ripping one,
-but the other held on bravely, and a crack on
-the head with the tomahawk finished the boar's
-career. He was too big and coarse for eating,
-so we left his body where it fell, and satisfied
-with our sport, turned for home, carrying to the
-edge of the bush the carcass of our first victim,
-which we tied on a fence, and our host on
-reaching the house sent his man back with a
-horse to bring it on.</p>
-
-<p>The last day of my visit was devoted to fishing.
-My bearded friend assumed command,
-and under his direction a fire was lit early in
-the morning beneath a large copper boiler; a
-certain proportion of the preserving powder was
-introduced in the water with which the copper
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>was filled, and the mixture allowed to boil,
-while we sallied forth to catch the fish.</p>
-
-<p>A net about one hundred yards long was
-produced by my host, and laid in the punt,
-together with two stakes to fasten the ends in
-the mud. We put off, and in a couple of hours
-had captured over a hundred fine mullet, and as
-these were sufficient to fill the two tubs, the net
-was hauled up, and we returned to the shore.
-The fish were then packed in the tubs, the
-heads fitted on, and the preserving preparation
-poured over them through holes afterwards
-plugged with corks.</p>
-
-<p>The success of the day's fishing decided
-me to make an offer for the property I had
-inspected, and I finally agreed to purchase&mdash;a
-reduction being made on account of the
-unfinished state of the house.</p>
-
-<p>Having arranged with a local carpenter to
-do the necessary work, I returned to Auckland
-quite satisfied with my investment.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>PURCHASING LIVE-STOCK.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I will</span> not weary the reader with an account of
-our journey from Auckland to our new property.
-As soon as I heard that the house was ready
-for occupation, we bade adieu to Parnell, and
-after a somewhat tedious journey arrived at the
-Matakohe Wharf, where a large barge with two
-men in it awaited us. Into it all our goods
-and chattels, together with ourselves, some fowls,
-and a retriever pup, were stowed, and after
-half an hour's pull we disembarked on the limestone
-beach in front of our new dwelling.</p>
-
-<p>The carpenter who had been doing up the
-house had secured for us the services of a country
-girl, who, among other accomplishments, understood
-the arts of milking and butter making.</p>
-
-<p>My first care was to purchase a couple of
-quiet cows.</p>
-
-<p>One I bought from a sanctimonious individual,
-who assured me the animal was perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-docile, stating as a proof that his little
-daughter was accustomed to milk her. Having
-sold me the cow, he expressed himself anxious
-as to my spiritual welfare, and preached me a
-short sermon in atrocious English on the subject
-of his own righteousness.</p>
-
-<p>Although the man was leaving the neighbourhood,
-I felt no hesitation in taking his word
-about the amiability of the cow&mdash;he seemed so
-oppressively pious. She was turned into my
-paddock, and in a few days one of my little boys
-came running breathlessly to me to say that she
-had a calf.</p>
-
-<p>I had been advised, when this event took place,
-to immediately take the calf away, and I accordingly
-proceeded to the paddock to do so, never
-anticipating any difficulty in the matter. To
-my surprise and alarm, however, when I got
-within about fifty yards of the animal, she
-suddenly lowered her head, and came straight
-for me, her rapid movements necessitating on
-my part a most ignominious and hasty retreat.
-On reaching safely the other side of the fence,
-I considered the matter over, and coming to
-the conclusion that my new "chumminess" in
-the matter of cows and calves must be to blame,
-sent to request the assistance of a settler living
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>near. He was unfortunately out at the time,
-but a lad who was lodging with him said he
-would come down.</p>
-
-<p>On his arrival he inquired in supremely
-contemptuous tones, "What! can't yer take a
-calf away?"</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_090.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="397" />
-<p class="caption center p90">The Pious Man's Cow.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I replied that the mother had protested in so
-very forcible a manner against my interfering
-with her infant that I thought I must have
-gone the wrong way to work, and asked him if
-<i>he</i> could undertake the business.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-<p>To this he briefly responded, "Rather!" and
-marched off with a confident air to the scene of
-action, while I secured a vantage place outside
-the fence. No sooner, however, did the pious
-man's late cow catch sight of the would-be
-abductor, than she charged like a streak of
-lightning, and I don't believe that that&mdash;alas!
-no-longer-confident&mdash;youth ever before made such
-good use of his legs. When he was in safety,
-and had recovered breath enough to speak, he
-gasped out, "If that there cow belonged to me,
-I'd shoot her!" and strode off without another
-word, leaving me in the depths of despair.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the day, the labouring man I had
-first sent for&mdash;a solemn-looking individual, with
-a long beard&mdash;came down, and when I related
-what had occurred, said with a placid and reassuring
-smile that he would soon settle matters
-satisfactorily. Procuring a tea-tree stake about
-five feet long, he requested me to follow him
-into the paddock, and on the way laid down a
-plan of attack.</p>
-
-<p>"When I see's a propitchus oppertunity,"
-said he, "I'll con-fūs-cate the calf; and if the
-parent animȳle precipices herself on me, as in
-all probableness she will, you must fetch her a
-right down preponderating blow atween the
-horns with this here tea-tree stake!"</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-<p>I did not like my allotted portion of this
-elegantly worded programme at all, and suggested
-that I should do the abduction part,
-while he "preponderated" the cow. This being
-agreed to, we cautiously entered the arena, and
-seizing my opportunity&mdash;and the calf at the
-same time&mdash;I retired at a speed that would have
-completely shamed a New Zealand express train.
-I never attempted to look round, but I heard a
-blow and a dull thud close behind, and knew
-something had happened.</p>
-
-<p>When outside the post and rail fence with
-my burden I breathed once more, and was
-delighted to see the settler standing triumphant,
-stake in hand, and the cow struggling
-on the ground. He had "preponderated" her
-in the most approved style, and the business
-was satisfactorily accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>I thanked him warmly; and foreseeing that a
-difficulty would probably arise in the milking
-of the brute, arranged with him to perform that
-office for a time. It was well I did so, for she
-proved a perfect "terror."</p>
-
-<p>To milk her it was not only necessary to put
-her in the bail&mdash;an arrangement which secures
-the head of the cow in somewhat the same
-manner as some of the old-fashioned instruments
-of punishment used to secure the head
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>of a man&mdash;but it was also necessary to rope both
-her hind legs to prevent her from kicking.
-These operations had to be gone through night
-and morning, and caused a great deal of trouble
-and waste of time.</p>
-
-<p>No more pious men's cows for me.</p>
-
-<p>The vendor of the other animal did not pretend
-to possess any excessive amount of spirituality,
-and the cow turned out a splendid animal.</p>
-
-<p>I next directed my attention to horseflesh, as
-I found it impossible to get about on foot to see
-the country. I tried several animals, but could
-find none in the neighbourhood to suit my fancy.</p>
-
-<p>One evening a man rode in who was anxious
-to sell the quadruped he bestrode&mdash;a weedy-looking,
-weak-necked animal, standing about
-fourteen hands, decidedly shaky about the knees,
-and with a swelling on the off-stifle joint.</p>
-
-<p>"There's a 'oss for you," he began, "choke
-full of spirits. Just the animal to suit yer. A
-regler gentleman's 'oss he is, and no mistake."</p>
-
-<p>I remarked that I feared he would hardly be
-up to my weight.</p>
-
-<p>"Not up to your weight! Lor' bless you, he'd
-carry you like a bird&mdash;'e's all 'art, 'e is. My
-word, you should see 'im junk&mdash;'e'd junk a
-brick wall down, 'e would."</p>
-
-<p>I had never before come across the word
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>"junk" in connection with equine accomplishments,
-but presumed it to be synonymous with
-"buck," and expressed a wish to see the performance.</p>
-
-<p>"Ketch hold of these 'ere eggs then," said
-he, handing me a basket. He next proceeded
-to cut a switch, armed with which he remounted
-the "junker," and pulling hard at
-the reins with one hand, punished the unfortunate
-animal with the switch, at the same
-time digging the spurs well home.</p>
-
-<p>After pursuing these tactics for a short time,
-he looked over his shoulder at me and questioned,
-"Ain't 'e junking yet?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," I replied, not liking to confess ignorance
-of the term; "he does not seem to be
-'junking' much."</p>
-
-<p>Another and a heavier dose of whip and spur
-torture was then administered, and at last the
-unhappy quadruped gave a feeble shake with
-one hind leg.</p>
-
-<p>"He's junking now a bit, I think," I cried,
-anxious to stop the exhibition.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! that ain't nothink," replied the owner.
-"Lor' bless you, you should see 'im junk sometimes;
-he'd junk a brick wall, 'e would; but 'e
-ain't in spirits now."</p>
-
-<p>The latter fact I was fully prepared to corroborate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-and may add that I did <i>not</i> purchase the "junker."</p>
-
-<p>I eventually succeeded in getting suited, and
-was able to look about the country.</p>
-
-<p>The tremendously steep grades on the so-called
-roads astonished me very much, but the
-horses bred out here think nothing of them.
-In the winter time these roads are veritable
-bogs in some places, and travelling is then
-anything but pleasant. When they become
-slippery, the horses have a fashion of putting
-their feet together, throwing themselves well
-back on their haunches, and sliding down the
-steep inclines. They never come to grief, and
-all the rider has to do is to lean well back in
-the saddle.</p>
-
-<p>The main road through the county is supposed
-to be constructed by the local governing body,
-called the County Council, which is composed
-of representatives from the several ridings or
-districts forming the county, each riding electing
-a councillor every three years.</p>
-
-<p>Too often the sole aim of a councillor is to
-get as much done as possible for the road near
-his own house, and to secure as much compensation
-as he can for himself and his friends,
-therefore almost useless roads are frequently
-promoted, and the money frittered away in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>their construction and in compensation to the
-owners of the land through which they pass.</p>
-
-<p>The main county road here is not yet formed
-in places, and though large sums have been expended,
-there was very little in the way of solid,
-substantial work to be seen until the last few
-months. Matakohe belonged to the Hobson
-County Council, which has existed for over ten
-years; it now forms part of a new county called
-the Otamatea.</p>
-
-<p>County Councils have power to levy rates and
-taxes, and to borrow money from the Government
-under certain conditions, and they take
-care to exercise all their privileges in these
-respects.</p>
-
-<p>When the chairman of a County Council is
-a large employer of labour and a man of influence,
-his part of the county generally shows
-the best graded and best metalled roads.
-Besides the County Councils, many of the
-ridings&mdash;of which Matakohe is one&mdash;possess
-Road Boards, also empowered to levy rates,
-and with the money carry out works on branch
-roads.</p>
-
-<p>It is very commonly believed that the
-country would progress far more rapidly if
-County Councils were abolished and the different
-districts represented solely by Road
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>Boards, which would determine the works considered
-most desirable, and draw up half yearly
-reports to be laid before a Government engineer,
-who, after examining into the merits of
-the schemes proposed, would finally decide on
-those most likely to be beneficial to the county,
-and which could be undertaken with the funds
-in hand.</p>
-
-<p>Enough, however, for the present of County
-Councils. The Matakoheans can certainly have
-no wish to uphold the system, as very little indeed
-has been done for their district by the county
-to which it, until quite lately, belonged. Its
-misfortune in this respect may have been due
-to its <em>situation</em>; it certainly was not due to its
-size, for Matakohe formed one of the largest
-ridings in the county.</p>
-
-<p>It boasts of between forty and fifty private
-houses scattered over a somewhat large area; a
-good-sized public hall where concerts, tea and
-prayer meetings, dances and theatrical performances
-are held from time to time; a chapel
-used on alternate Sundays by the Wesleyans
-and Church of England people; a cemetery, a
-Government school-house, a public library, &amp;c.
-&amp;c.; three general stores (or shops, as they
-would be called in England); a saw-mill, a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>tremendously long wharf in a tremendously
-inconvenient place, and a capital racecourse,
-here the Matakohe Racing Club holds an
-annual meeting.</p>
-
-<p>Horse-racing is one of the great national
-amusements of New Zealanders, and there are
-very few settlements in the Northern Kaipara
-which do not number owners of racehorses
-among their inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>In England racing is associated with betting,
-blacklegs, welshers, suicides, and other disagreeable
-things: out here, as far as small
-country meetings are concerned, it means
-genuine, honest, legitimate sport, and should
-be encouraged, as calculated to improve the
-breed of horses in the colony, and to do a great
-amount of good to the districts in which the
-meetings are held.</p>
-
-<p>A sort of betting-machine called the "Totalisator"
-has indeed been legalised by the New
-Zealand Government, but may only be used at
-race meetings where prizes of thirty pounds
-and upwards are given. It therefore does not
-affect in any way small meetings like ours, and
-the Matakohe Racing Club have no desire that
-it should.</p>
-
-<p>For the benefit of my readers who are unacquainted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-with the betting-machine, I will
-endeavour to describe the manner in which it
-is worked. The intending speculator enters
-small office and buys his ticket, or tickets,
-according to his rashness, and then proceeds to
-examine a board on one of the walls of an inner
-chamber, where are displayed certain variable
-numbers arranged in the following manner:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_099.jpg" alt="Horse racing club card" width="434" height="500" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, represent the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>starting horses in the order shown on the Racing
-Club's card. They may therefore be taken to
-stand instead of the horses' names.</p>
-
-<p>In the illustration above seven horses are
-supposed to be going to run. The numerals
-underneath in the squares indicate the number
-of tickets invested on each horse, and the top
-square records the total tickets sold.</p>
-
-<p>When the investor has consulted his "correct card," and decided on
-what horse to place his ticket, he gets it stamped with its number,
-and the figure or figures on the board under the selected horse and
-those representing the total tickets sold are each moved on one.
-A few minutes before the race a bell is rung, and the totalisator
-closed, and after the event is decided the total proceeds&mdash;less
-ten per cent.&mdash;are divided among those who have placed their
-tickets on the winning horse. Thus in the illustration, supposing No.
-6 won, and the tickets a pound each, the wily individual who placed
-his money there would receive ninety pounds; if No. 3 won, each of
-the five investors would receive a dividend of eighteen pounds; if
-No. 1, a dividend of one pound eighteen shillings and three-pence,
-and so on. The ten per cent. deducted from the receipts is divided
-between the proprietors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101"
-id="Page_101">[101]</a></span> of the machine and the Jockey Club;
-and inasmuch as fourteen or fifteen thousand pounds generally passes
-through it at one of the large Racing Club Meetings, the totalisator
-will be seen to be a paying concern. The advisability of taxing it was
-mooted in Parliament last year; and as our sage administrators of the
-law have deemed it right to make the betting-machine legal, surely they
-cannot be wrong in taxing it heavily as a luxury.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A COLONIAL BALL.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> had not been long settled in Matakohe
-when an invitation to a ball at Mr. M&mdash;&mdash;'s
-was received, asking us to go early in the day,
-as the tide then suited best, to bring our evening
-clothes with us, and to dress there. We
-accomplished the journey in my punt, for I
-had by this time one of my own, and on our
-arrival at Mr. M&mdash;&mdash;'s found the household
-very busy with preparations.</p>
-
-<p>One half the spacious verandah had been
-closed in with canvas, and formed a supper
-room. It was decorated with flags, Nikau
-palms, ferns, and flowers with very pretty effect.
-The other half was to be utilised as a promenade,
-and was hung with Chinese lanterns.</p>
-
-<p>As the afternoon advanced, guests began to
-arrive&mdash;some on horseback, and some by boat.
-They all brought their evening clothes with
-them, not in portmanteaus, but in <em>flour bags</em>.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>It is most surprising to a new chum to see the
-manifold uses to which flour bags are put to
-here. Besides usually taking the place of portmanteaus,
-they are made into aprons, kitchen
-cloths, dusters, and sometimes even into trousers
-for boys. Not long ago I met a lad with a
-pair on. On one leg, printed in large red
-letters, was "Wood silk dressed;" and on the
-other "Lamb's Superfine." Almost every one
-bakes at home in the country, so flour bags are
-very plentiful.</p>
-
-<p>Rather late in the afternoon a gentleman
-arrived in a punt with his wife. It was nearly
-low water, and he got stranded in the mud fully
-a quarter of a mile from the beach. Finding he
-could not get the punt any further, he jumped
-overboard&mdash;sinking immediately nearly up to
-his waist&mdash;and pushed the punt with his wife in
-it to the shore. Changing his clothes in a boat-house
-on the beach, he shortly after appeared
-at the house as though nothing unusual had
-occurred, and I don't think considered his adventure
-worthy of mention to any one.</p>
-
-<p>I have had several mud-larking experiences
-myself since then, but have not yet learned
-to behave with the <em>sang froid</em> displayed by the
-gentleman on this occasion.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span></p>
-<p>When the time arrived for donning our dress
-clothes, I was ushered into a huge barn standing
-close to the house, where several washing
-basins, brushes and combs, looking-glasses and
-other toilet necessaries had been placed in
-position on tables and boxes. Between thirty and
-forty gentlemen, in various stages of dressing,
-were there, and jokes and repartee were being
-bandied about freely. Several of the gentlemen
-caricatured in that amusing book, "Brighter
-Britain,"&mdash;written after a visit of the author
-to this part of the colony,&mdash;were present, and
-most of them had already called and made
-my acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>The feat of dressing accomplished, and
-having succeeded in arranging my tie in some
-sort of fashion by the aid of a hand-glass and
-flickering candle, I proceeded to the drawing-room,
-from whence already issued the enlivening
-strains of one of Godfrey's valses.</p>
-
-<p>The settlers up here, and in the province of
-Auckland generally, are most enthusiastic about
-dancing. Young and old, married and single,
-all delight in it, and no opportunity of indulging
-in a dance is ever neglected.</p>
-
-<p>Flirtation I have never seen attempted, and
-conversation indeed is only sparsely carried on.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>It is in the dancing itself that the enjoyment
-is centred, and to it the attention of both ladies
-and gentlemen is almost wholly directed. An
-anxious expression is ofttimes observable on the
-face of a male performer, as though his whole
-mind was concentrated in the effort to acquit
-himself well in the task before him; but though
-is countenance depicts no pleasurable emotion,
-he doubtless enjoys himself immensely.</p>
-
-<p>On the present occasion dancing was carried
-on with unrelaxed vigour until past midnight,
-when a move was made to the supper room. The
-inner man refreshed, dancing was resumed, and
-day began to dawn before the party broke up.</p>
-
-<p>The greater part of the ladies slept at the
-house, though some rode straight away after
-donning their riding-habits. The gentlemen,
-about forty in number, were accommodated in
-the barn with beds of soft hay and rugs.</p>
-
-<p>The ease with which the ladies out here do without the
-paraphernalia, considered in England as necessary in preparing for a
-ball, struck me greatly at this, my first colonial one. The dressing of
-a young lady at home is a big affair, embracing an elaborate costume,
-an equally elaborate toilette, hair-dressing, and goodness knows
-what all, and concluding generally with <span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>an elaborate bill. Out
-here a light dress of muslin or some similar material, relieved with a
-little ribbon, and hair ornamented with a flower or two, constitutes
-the full evening costume of a young lady. She looks quite as nice
-as her semi-manufactured rival in England, and there is no prospect
-of a big bill for papa in the immediate future to mar her evening's
-amusement.</p>
-
-<p>The gentlemen are equally negligent. If they have dress clothes,
-they put them on; but if they have not, they appear in whatever cut of
-black coat they happen to be the proprietors of, and enjoy themselves
-every bit as much as their swallow-tailed companions.</p>
-
-<p>Before I left Mr. M&mdash;&mdash;'s residence, he informed
-me that the fish-preserving scheme had
-turned out a failure, and that my bearded acquaintance
-had received a letter from his partner
-in the Waikato, in which he stated that the fish
-forwarded in the two tubs had sold readily at
-one shilling each, but had made all who partook
-of them very ill. "He presumed," he wrote,
-"that there must be something wrong with the
-German preserving preparation," and concluded
-by stating that as he had no wish to be apprehended
-for manslaughter, he must decline to
-have anything more to do with the business.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>THE FORESTS OF NORTH NEW ZEALAND.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">With</span> the failure of the German preparation, my
-hopes of being made manager to the Fish Preserving
-Company vanished. I cannot say I had
-built much on it, so did not take the matter very
-deeply to heart. If the industry had been fairly
-started, the post of coroner in the Waikato might
-have been worth looking after. The ultimatum
-of the Waikato partner, however, nipped the
-business in the bud, and probably saved some
-lives.</p>
-
-<p>No prospect of getting professional work had
-yet shown itself; and the only post I had succeeded
-in obtaining was that of correspondent
-to the Auckland weekly paper, an appointment
-of not a very lucrative nature.</p>
-
-<p>Time, however, by no means hung heavily on
-my hands. There was plenty to do about my
-place, which had been much neglected. The
-weeds were disputing possession with the fruit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>trees, and had they been left undisturbed much
-longer I think would have gained the day. A
-peculiar kind of thistle, called the "cow thistle,"
-grew everywhere luxuriantly, and docks with
-roots as thick as a man's arm were abundant.</p>
-
-<p>I became familiarised with hoeing, digging,
-pruning fruit trees, and the use of the axe. The
-latter is a most necessary accomplishment in
-this part of the colony, as to the axe every one
-trusts for his supply of fuel. When I first
-attempted to wield it, each blow struck jarred
-my hands and arms tremendously, and at the
-same time made little impression on the wood;
-but at last I caught the trick, and am now a
-fairly good axeman.</p>
-
-<p>Small tea-tree, or "Manuka," to use the native name, is principally
-used for firing. The wood is hard and close-grained, and gives
-out a great amount of heat. It grows in large and dense patches
-called "scrub." The trees in the scrub generally stand about a foot
-apart, run up straight for some twelve feet, and then break into
-a small bunch of branches. If tea-tree happens to be isolated, it
-becomes a spreading tree of fair dimensions, though it never grows
-sufficiently large to be employed much in carpentering. It is always
-more or less in flower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109"
-id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>&mdash;a beautiful small white
-flower&mdash;with which at some seasons of the year it is completely
-covered. Not only is tea-tree universally used for firewood, but it
-supplies the material of which most of the fences up here are composed,
-and is preferred to any other wood for wheel-spokes. It is, therefore,
-one of the most useful natural productions of the colony.</p>
-
-<p>North New Zealand boasts of a great variety
-of splendid timber, of which the Kauri pine
-(<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dammara australis</i>) takes the lead. These
-giants of the forest attain a girth sometimes of
-between forty and fifty feet, and grow up perfectly
-straight for sixty or seventy feet before
-throwing out branches. They reminded me
-when I first saw them of the toy trees with
-little round stands that used to be sold with
-boxes containing wooden animals. If the reader
-can imagine one of these toy trees magnified
-some six or seven hundred times, he will have
-a fair idea of what a Kauri looks like. Its
-foliage resembles somewhat that of the ornamental
-shrub known as the "Monkey plant,"
-the leaves being stiff and glossy.</p>
-
-<p>The Kauri is used more extensively than any
-other New Zealand wood for building purposes.
-It is a magnificent timber, and if properly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>seasoned, neither shrinks nor warps. Very
-few of the bush owners, however, can afford to
-let timber lie idle for any length of time, and
-therefore the majority of the Kauri used is not
-seasoned, and shrinks very much both ways.
-So much is this the case, and so unreliable
-is the timber considered through insufficient
-seasoning, that a clause has been inserted in
-the specification for the New Auckland Custom
-House, now about to be erected, which states
-that Baltic timber, and not Kauri, is to be used
-for sashes, architraves, mouldings, &amp;c. As Kauri
-is very easily worked, and admits of a splendid
-polish, it is greatly to be regretted that with
-such timber in the province the architect should
-have deemed it necessary to specify Baltic
-timber. It is nevertheless true, however; and
-the cause may be summed up in six words,
-"High wages and want of capital," the great
-bane of New Zealand, felt not only in the
-timber trade, but in all other industries that
-have been established.</p>
-
-<p>In getting out the Kauri, an immense and
-at times reckless destruction of young trees
-takes place, and for this reason the time is not
-far distant when the Kauri pine will be a tree
-of the past.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-<p>From an official report of Mr. T. Kirk, F.L.S.,
-Chief Conservator of State Forests&mdash;for a copy of
-which I am indebted to the courtesy of Mr. S.
-P. Smith, Assistant Surveyor-General&mdash;it appears
-that the total extent of available Kauri forest
-now existing does not exceed two hundred
-thousand acres, and placing the average yield
-at the high rate of fifteen thousand superficial
-feet per acre, the Kauri at the present demand
-will be exhausted in twenty-six years. If, however,
-the demand increases in the same ratio as
-it has shown during the last ten years, it will be
-worked out in fifteen years. When we consider
-that the Kauri timber trade is one of the
-mainstays of the North Auckland district, this
-is a most alarming statement. The export trade
-amounted last year to the value of £136,000&mdash;more
-than five times as much as the timber trade
-of all the rest of the colony put together; and
-it is difficult to see what is to take its place
-when the last Kauri has been felled. In Mr.
-Kirk's report no allowance is made for probable
-loss by bush fires, which in the dry weather are
-constantly breaking out, and which are generally
-ascribed, rightly or wrongly, to the carelessness
-of gumdiggers or to vindictiveness. Fires in
-the heavy Kauri bush last a long time when
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>they once get hold, and do an immense amount
-of damage. There is a Kauri bush at the present
-time on fire in this riding of Matakohe which
-has been alight for the last five or six months.
-A large quantity of timber must be destroyed
-in this way, and the contingency of fire further
-lessens the probable duration of the Kauri
-forests of North New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>The task of felling and getting the timber out
-of the bushes is a difficult and dangerous one.
-The country north of Auckland, where Kauri
-abounds, is usually very broken, and seldom
-admits of a tramway being laid down to carry
-the logs on. When the timber is on high ground,
-the usual method adopted is to cut the logs
-into suitable lengths with cross-cut saws, move
-them by means of timber jacks and immense
-teams of bullocks to the brow of a convenient
-incline, and let them slide down a well-greased
-shoot composed of young Kauri trees, a great
-number of which are thus annually destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>If the bush happens to be on the borders of
-the Kaipara, the logs are placed behind booms
-until enough are collected to make a raft. If,
-however, it is situated some little distance from
-deep water, the logs are laid in the bed of an
-adjacent creek, higher up in which a dam is
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>formed and the water stored. When sufficient
-logs are collected, and sufficient water stored
-behind the dam, the sluices are opened, and the
-logs washed down to the Kaipara, where they
-are gathered, chained together, and towed to
-their destination.</p>
-
-<p>Ordinary Kauri timber presents, when polished
-or varnished, a wavy appearance, and is darker
-in some places than in others; but occasionally
-Kauri is mottled, and when this is the case it
-is very valuable for veneering purposes, being
-worth from £3 to £5 per hundred superficial
-feet, while the average price of ordinary Kauri
-is only ten shillings per hundred feet.</p>
-
-<p>The mottling is sometimes caused by the tree
-throwing out an excessive number of branchlets,
-and at others by a sort of disease in which the
-too rapid development of cellular tissue prevents
-the proper expansion of the bark, and
-small portions become enclosed in the sap
-wood, and form the dark mottlings. Mottled
-Kauri trees are usually found in rocky situations.</p>
-
-<p>The total area covered by forest in the North
-Auckland provincial district&mdash;of which the Kaipara
-forms a part&mdash;is estimated by the chief
-surveyor to be seven million two hundred
-thousand acres, about one million six hundred
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>and seven thousand acres being held by the
-Crown. One peculiar feature in these forests
-is that while they possess several trees&mdash;among
-others the Kauri&mdash;not to be met with in any
-other part of New Zealand, they still contain
-all the trees found elsewhere in the colony.</p>
-
-<p>The Puriri (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vitex littoralis</i>), sometimes called
-the New Zealand oak, is perhaps next in importance
-to the Kauri, on account of its great
-durability. It is principally used for railway
-sleepers, house blocks, framings of carriages, and
-fencing posts. It makes excellent furniture,
-and is said to equal the English oak in strength
-and durability. Sometimes the tree grows to a
-height of twenty feet in the trunk, and Puriri
-logs have been cut nine feet in diameter.</p>
-
-<p>The Kahikatea (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Podocarpus dacrydioides</i>), a
-white pine, is a magnificent-looking tree, often
-reaching a total height of one hundred and fifty
-feet, with a barrel clear of branches seventy-five
-feet long. Its timber is highly valued for the
-inside lining of houses.</p>
-
-<p>The Totara (<em>Podocarpus totara</em>) is employed
-in making wharf piles, telegraph posts, sleepers,
-and in the construction of houses and furniture.
-It occasionally grows to a height of seventy
-feet or so, perfectly straight, without a knot
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>or branch, and is used by the natives for
-making canoes, some of which, seventy feet in
-length, have been hollowed out of Totara logs.
-It is the only wood that successfully withstands
-the ravages of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Teredo navalis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Pohutukawa (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Metrosideros tomentosa</i>)
-is a very handsome tree, usually to be found
-growing near the water's edge. At Christmas
-time it is covered with beautiful red blossoms,
-and on that account is called New Zealand holly.
-The trunk is very hard, and is invaluable for
-knees and timbers of ships and boats.</p>
-
-<p>The Rata (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Metrosideros robusta</i>) has until
-lately been considered by most people to be
-altogether a parasite, but it has now been proved
-beyond doubt that its seed is deposited by birds,
-or the wind, in the fork of a tree, where it
-germinates and sends forth two or three roots
-which creep down the trunk to the ground.
-These roots, as they grow, press on the supporting
-tree, until they cause its death, and the
-Rata then stands alone. The wood is very hard,
-and when not too twisted, may be split into very
-good fencing rails.</p>
-
-<p>The Rimu (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Dacrydium cupressinum</i>) is a
-very stately pine, with drooping branches like the
-weeping willow. It grows up straight for about
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>sixty feet, with a slightly tapering barrel some
-two or three feet in diameter at the ground. The
-grain of this wood is red, streaked with black,
-and it makes splendid furniture, balustrades and
-railings for staircases, panels for doors, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>There are a great many other varieties of trees
-in the North Kaipara forests, which, however,
-I will content myself with stating are most of
-them exceedingly beautiful in grain, and should
-find places of honour in cabinet and furniture
-makers' work. In spite, however, of the beautiful
-woods at command, the furniture-making
-trade has made but little progress in Auckland,
-and I presume the high price of labour and
-want of capital prevent it from being pushed.</p>
-
-<p>The bushman who fells the timber and rolls
-out the logs receives an average wage of thirty
-shillings a week, as well as his food, or, as
-it is called here, his "tucker;" the towing
-charges are high, and the railway rates from
-Helensville to Auckland exorbitant; and so
-by the time the timber has passed through the
-mills and left the furniture-maker's hands, the
-excessive payments for labour, railway and towing
-charges, have made the articles into which
-it has been converted so expensive, that the
-trade is killed.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-<p>The annual output of timber in the Auckland
-district is estimated at about one hundred
-million superficial feet, and the larger proportion
-is employed in the construction of houses,
-bridges, &amp;c., in the colony.</p>
-
-<p>Timber houses are a great deal more durable
-than many people would imagine: there are
-some still standing in Auckland&mdash;in fairly good
-condition&mdash;built nearly forty years ago. The
-mode of erection usually adopted is briefly as
-follows. Puriri blocks, sunk in the ground deep
-enough to insure a good foundation, and of
-sufficient length to project above the surface
-two or three feet, are set up in rows four or five
-feet apart. On these blocks&mdash;the tops of which
-are sawn off perfectly level with one another&mdash;is
-laid a frame of timber, marking out the rooms
-and passage, and on this the superstructure is
-raised. Instead of slates or tiles, thin strips of
-wood, called shingles, split off small blocks of
-Kauri, are most commonly used for the roofing,
-though corrugated iron sometimes takes their
-place. In the better class of house a brick
-chimney runs through the structure, but in
-the smaller and cheaper ones a wide wooden
-chimney is erected at one end.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>THE LABOURING-MAN SETTLER.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I trust</span> the kind reader will excuse the somewhat
-sudden departure from my narrative to
-the forests of North New Zealand, which characterised
-the last chapter, and will now also
-pardon an equally abrupt return to my humble
-doings.</p>
-
-<p>When in Auckland I had bought three or
-four books on colonial fruit culture, all of which
-I found, on investigating their contents, advocated
-thorough drainage. I therefore made up
-my mind to attempt to drain my smaller orchard,
-and in order to do so successfully, carefully took
-the levels, and planned out the drains. I tried
-digging them myself, but the work progressed
-so slowly, and my hands became so uncomfortably
-blistered, that I was obliged to call in
-extraneous aid, and applied to a labouring man,
-a settler in the district, for his assistance. His
-terms were seven shillings a day, which I with
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>much reluctance agreed to give. He arrived at
-the scene of his labour at eight o'clock on the
-morning following my interview with him, took
-a full hour in the middle of the day for his
-dinner, and left off work at five <span class="smcap">P.M.</span> with a
-punctuality worthy of a better cause. At the
-end of three days he had opened one drain to
-the required depth; it would take ten of them
-to drain the orchard, and they would require,
-in order to keep them open, filling up with tea-tree,
-the cutting and carrying of which would
-probably equal the cost of the digging. I therefore
-came to the conclusion that draining my
-orchard would go a good way towards draining
-my purse, and determined to abandon the
-project.</p>
-
-<p>The labouring man, when I informed him of
-my resolution, said, with a melancholy air of
-superior wisdom, "I guessed you'd soon get
-tired of it," and appeared quite resigned to his
-dismissal.</p>
-
-<p>Among the labouring-men settlers (by which
-expression I mean those who go out to work at
-so much a day) there is to be found a type of
-humanity quite distinct from any other I have
-ever met with. Specimens of this class are
-sometimes just sufficiently educated to be able
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>to read and write, and sometimes have no education
-at all, but still they believe themselves&mdash;truly
-and earnestly believe themselves&mdash;to be
-gentlemen. They are to be distinguished by
-solemn-looking faces, to which beards are generally
-attached. They very seldom smile, never
-laugh, and always speak slowly and deliberately,
-often using long words in wrong places.</p>
-
-<p>This variety of the labouring-man settler
-delights in being called by the prefix Mr.&mdash;&mdash;,
-and it would give him unspeakable joy to
-receive a letter addressed Mr.&mdash;&mdash;, Esq. Imported
-probably into New Zealand in its early
-days, he knows little more than the Maori
-about the doings of the great world. Yet he is
-very self-opinionated, and considers Auckland
-the finest city in the universe. He does a good
-deal of "gassing" in a solemn manner, which
-inclines a stranger to give credence to his
-romances, until their dimensions become too
-large to be swallowed. In spite of these little
-failings, he is steady, honest, temperate, and
-his chief fault lies in his believing himself to be
-what he is not, and what he never can be. He
-is a square man continually trying to fit himself
-into a round hole, a task impossible for him
-to accomplish, while the effort to do so sours
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>is disposition and renders him melancholy.
-He either possesses extreme religious views, and
-is very bigoted and narrow-minded, or he has no
-religion of any kind. Of course he owns land,
-given him by the Government that brought him
-out. He works fairly hard on his own property&mdash;harder,
-I am inclined to think, than he does
-when engaged on any one else's; and the fact
-of his being a landed proprietor, probably gives
-him the impression that he <i>must</i> be a gentleman,
-and is the cause of all his futile strivings and
-unhappiness.</p>
-
-<p>I do not mean for one moment to assert that
-all the labouring-men settlers are like the above.
-There are many who have been soldiers, sailors,
-or have followed some occupation, before they
-settled in New Zealand, which has given them
-opportunities of seeing life. Their views are
-therefore larger and wider, and they have learnt
-how to laugh. Still, in most of the settlements
-I am acquainted with, are to be found some
-examples of the class of settler I have described.</p>
-
-<p>Having abandoned the drainage scheme, I
-turned my attention to effecting other improvements,
-and amongst them built a small pier or
-wharf of limestone rock, at the sea end of which
-I kept my punt, and so could get away in it as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>soon as the tide came in, instead of having to
-push it over the rough limestone beach.</p>
-
-<p>One day a young Matakohe settler called, and
-asked me if I would care to join a small party,
-to ride out on the following morning to the
-Wairoa swamp, to try and destroy a dangerous
-wild bull that was roaming about there, and
-which a few days previously had gored the
-speaker's horse, when he was cattle-hunting, he
-himself only escaping by jumping into a creek.
-He also told me there were great numbers of
-Pūkĕkŏ or swamp-hens there, and that after
-despatching the bull, we might be able to have
-some Pūkĕkŏ shooting. I at once agreed to
-join the party, and that night visions of roaring
-bulls with distended nostrils, lowered heads,
-and erected tails attended my slumbers.</p>
-
-<p>I awoke next morning with a sort of Gordon
-Cumming feeling about me, and made preparation
-for my first day's big game shooting. Armed
-with a rifle and fowling-piece, I mounted my
-horse, and sallied forth to the place of rendezvous,
-where our party, four in number, had
-already assembled, and after a ride of about
-nine miles, we reached the edge of the swamp.
-Two of the party who had not brought guns,
-then proceeded on horseback, to discover the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>whereabouts of the game, and one of them
-dismounted to examine a clump of tea-tree,
-growing on a high mound about four hundred
-yards out on the swamp.</p>
-
-<p>There the animal was, sure enough, and
-the rash disturber of his peace had only time
-to climb a friendly cabbage-tree when he
-charged.</p>
-
-<p>We could see the man in the tree, but no
-sight of any animal, and wondered what he
-could be doing up there, until he shouted out
-that he was bailed up by the bull. Upon
-receiving this intelligence we sallied forth to
-endeavour to persuade the beast to raise the
-siege, and the mounted settler, by cracking the
-stock whip which he carried in the vicinity of the
-scrub, at last succeeded in getting the bull to come
-out on to the open swamp, when I immediately
-fired and put a rifle ball through his stomach.
-Another bullet from a fowling-piece brought
-him to the ground, and thus ended my first and
-only bull hunt&mdash;a very tame affair. If the
-animal had seen and charged us when we were
-on foot on the open swamp, before I handicapped
-him with a bullet, it would probably have been
-quite exciting enough for some of us, but as it
-turned out, the bull did not give half the sport
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>the pious man's cow afforded, when her calf was
-taken away.</p>
-
-<p>There are great numbers of wild cattle in
-the back country of this district, and I am told
-that most exciting adventures at times take
-place with them, though I cannot speak from
-experience.</p>
-
-<p>The two settlers who had not brought their
-guns, skinned the carcass of the animal we had
-shot, and cut off some of the choicest pieces
-of its flesh; and while they were so employed,
-the rest of us went on the swamp to shoot
-Pūkĕkŏ, which were there in great numbers.
-Every minute or two, as we pushed our way
-through the tall Raupo grass, Pūkĕkŏ would
-rise about thirty yards ahead, and we had some
-very pretty shooting, and made a heavy bag.
-The Pūkĕkŏ belongs undoubtedly to the same
-family as the familiar moorhen of the old
-country. It is, however, much larger, and is
-a very handsome bird. The neck, breast, and
-body are bright blue, the wings black, and the
-underneath part of the tail white. It has a flat
-red sort of comb or crown on the top of the
-head, and red feet. Its flesh is very good to
-eat in the New Zealand autumn, but only at
-that time of year.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>KAIPARA FISH.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Although</span> I had been defeated in my scheme
-of draining my orchards, I did not on that account
-give them up in despair, but endeavoured
-to improve the condition of each tree by lightly
-digging round it, and mulching it with the weeds
-I had taken off the land. They seemed all to be
-growing nicely, and the peaches the first season
-yielded a tremendous crop of most delicious
-fruit; so many indeed had we, that besides
-almost living on them ourselves, we fed the
-pigs with them. It was a great season everywhere
-in North New Zealand for peaches, but
-since then some sort of blight has universally
-attacked the older trees. The why or the wherefore
-of the disease remains a mystery, and the
-matter is greatly exercising the minds of the
-most eminent authorities in the colony. All
-sorts of theories have been put forward, but no
-satisfactory solution has been arrived at. One
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>might almost fancy that some personage possessing
-mysterious power, and suffering from too
-free indulgence in the delicious fruit, had cursed
-them, as the Abbot in the Ingoldsby Legends
-cursed the Jackdaw of Rheims.</p>
-
-<p>Other fruit-trees, both English and sub-tropical,
-grow and fruit remarkably well in the
-North Kaipara, in spite of the fact that not a
-single orchard anywhere is drained. If every
-advantage were given the trees, what would
-they not produce!</p>
-
-<p>The climate is eminently suitable to fruit-tree
-culture, and the slopes of the undulating hills
-present everywhere opportunities for planting
-snugly sheltered orchards. Fruit-growing ought
-to become one of the standard industries of the
-district; but before that can happen, the railway
-charges must be lowered very considerably.
-The first apple season after I was settled in
-Matakohe, I sent a case of splendid apples
-down to Auckland to be sold, and the sale
-just covered the freight.</p>
-
-<p>The excessive and prohibitive railway charges
-tend to stop all enterprise. The railways are
-supposed to have been constructed to open up
-the country, develop its resources, and induce
-settlement; but as they are at present managed,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>it would be absurd to think of starting any
-industry, in which they would have to play
-an important part as carriers. Cheap railway
-freights and fares would naturally have a tendency
-to enhance the value of the land in the
-country which came within their influence,
-bringing it as it were in closer contact with the
-centres of population, and it may therefore be
-inferred that owners of suburban estates&mdash;which
-must suffer by country properties being rendered
-more marketable&mdash;are by no means anxious for
-any alteration in the railway tariff, and suburban
-landowners are a power in the colony. The
-time must come, however, when in spite of all
-opposition, the freights will be lowered, and the
-sooner the better for the prosperity of New
-Zealand, and for the fruit-growing industry of
-the Kaipara. Enough, however, of railway mismanagement.</p>
-
-<p>A settler who understood netting had made
-me a small fishing-net, and fish now formed a
-prominent feature at our table. Fishing wasted
-a good deal of time, however, as most of the fish
-are caught in narrow channels when the tide is
-running out, and the punt almost invariably
-was left high and dry, and had to remain until
-the tide flowed. I always in a day's fishing
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>caught a great many more fish than we required
-for our own use, and it occurred to me to enclose
-a portion of the beach below high-water mark
-with a wall, so as to form a miniature fish-pond
-to keep the surplus fish in. As the tide flowed
-a self-acting valve let the water in, but prevented
-it from flowing out again when it ebbed. A
-lever connected with this valve, allowed me to
-empty the pond at pleasure.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_128.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="352" />
-<p class="caption center p90">My Fish Pond.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The piscatorial residence&mdash;forty-six feet long,
-twenty-three feet wide, and five and a half feet
-deep&mdash;being ready for occupation, the next
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>question to determine, was how to keep the fish
-alive after they were caught, until they could be
-transferred to the pond. To accomplish this, I
-made a sort of basket of wire-netting to hang
-over the side of the boat and keep the fish in,
-but it proved a failure, and I eventually purchased
-a little punt about six feet long, which
-had been built for a boy, but was too cranky to
-be used with any degree of safety. In this punt,
-fitted with a removable canvas cover, and filled
-with water, the captured fish were deposited,
-towed home, and transferred to the pond, where
-they soon appeared to be perfectly at home.</p>
-
-<p>About this time I obtained the services of an
-able-bodied lad of some seventeen years, who
-understood farm work and a little carpentering.
-He used to fish for me at times, and caught so
-many fish that I tried sending fresh fish down
-to Auckland for sale there. The journey occupied,
-however, the greater part of two days,
-though the distance is under a hundred miles,
-and the fish did not arrive in town in good
-condition. If packed in ice, they would of
-course have kept perfectly fresh, as they were
-alive when sent from Matakohe; but I had no
-ice-making machine, and therefore was obliged
-to give the matter up.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-<p>I feel confident, however, that the fishery here
-only wants capital to develop it, to become one
-of the great industries of the North Kaipara.
-Its land-locked waters swarm with the finny
-tribe, and can be fished with impunity in any
-weather. Fish is by no means a cheap commodity
-in Auckland; but the population being
-small, the market there would soon be glutted.
-Sydney, Melbourne, and the other Australian
-ports, however, present a grand field for the disposal
-of the fisherman's spoils, and were fish sent
-away alive from here packed in ice, frozen by the
-Freezing Company in Auckland, and transported
-from there to Australia in ships provided with
-freezing chambers, I cannot help believing an
-immense trade would be done.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_131.jpg" alt="" width="456" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Sketch of Schnapper.</p>
-<p class="caption center p90">Skull of Schnapper.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I have seen in the newspaper the price of fish
-called schnapper, quoted in the Sydney market at
-from thirty-six shillings to eighty-four shillings
-per dozen. These fish can be caught line-fishing
-in the Kaipara, at the rate of sixty or seventy an
-hour per line of two hooks, and of an average
-weight of about 9 lbs. each. The schnapper
-fisherman files the barbs off his hooks, that
-they may readily be extracted from the fishes'
-mouths; he also ties the bait securely on; and
-thus prepared, can haul the fish in as fast as he
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>likes. The schnapper has most powerful teeth
-and jaws, and lives principally on cockles and
-mussels, the shells of which it crushes in its
-mouth without difficulty. It will, however, take
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>almost any sort of bait, and is by no means a
-fastidious eater. The Kaipara waters swarm
-also with several other varieties of fish.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_132.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="276" />
-<p class="caption center p90"> Sketch of Lower Jaw of Schnapper, showing double row of teeth.</p>
-<p class="caption center p90">(About half size.)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><em>Mullet</em>, resembling in appearance the grey
-mullet of the old country, but far richer and
-superior in flavour, are very plentiful during
-the summer months. These fish and schnapper
-are most delicious when salted and smoked,
-and may be said to fill the place of the English
-herring and haddock. Mullet average about
-2 lbs. each in weight, and I have known one
-hundred and twenty dozen of them to be netted
-by two men in a day up here.</p>
-
-<p><em>Patiki</em>, a fish shaped exactly as the English
-flounder, but resembling more nearly in flavour
-the sole, are here in great numbers, and can be
-caught with a net in boat loads.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-<p>The <em>Kahawai</em>, weighing on the average 5 or
-6 lbs., and modelled very much like the salmon,
-though finer in the tail, and with spotted sides.
-The resemblance unfortunately ends with the
-shape, for its flesh is dry and not over palatable.
-It lives principally on young mullet and Patiki.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>yellow tail</em>, a sort of sea bream; a fish called locally the
-<em>king fish</em>, closely resembling in shape, fins, colour, and scales the
-fresh water tench; the <em>dog fish</em>, <em>eels</em>, and a small fish with a long
-snout called the <em>pipe fish</em>, complete the list, with the exception of
-the <em>shark</em>, and a fish called the <em>Stingarie</em>, doubtless a corruption
-of Stinging Ray. This fish&mdash;in form somewhat like the skate, with
-the exception that it has a long tail&mdash;attains a weight, at times,
-of about a quarter of a ton, and possesses a most formidable sting,
-armed with sharp-pointed barbs, and from six to eight inches in length,
-and about half an inch in width. This sting is situated at the root
-of the tail, and lies flat along it. When the fish makes an attack,
-it elevates its sting, and runs backwards with great speed at the
-object of its wrath. The Stingarie is of a discreet nature, however,
-and will never make an attack, unless driven to it. Its principal
-food, like the Kahawai, consists of mullet and Patiki.</p> <p><span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-<p>Oysters and other bivalves, including Pipis (cockles) and escalops,
-also abound in the Kaipara. The rough corrugated shelled rock oyster,
-spoken of in my second chapter, are very abundant in places; and
-there is another kind, a smooth shelled oyster, very like the English
-native, which locates itself in deep water, and therefore is seldom met
-with.</p>
-
-<p>Escalops, I think, must be plentiful, if one may judge by the number
-of escalop shells thrown up on the beaches near deep water. To procure
-these delicacies a dredge would be necessary, and dredges for shell
-fish are as yet unknown in the Kaipara, neither has the trawl net
-ever been tried, so it is impossible to say what unknown piscatorial
-treasures may yet lie hidden in the unexplored depths of the waters of
-our inland sea.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>GODWIT SHOOTING.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Whatever</span> accusations of remissness and lack
-of zeal and energy may be brought against the
-New Zealand Government, no one can assert
-with any degree of truth, that the surveys of
-this part of the country are neglected by them.
-Before one surveyor's pegs have had time to
-commence to decay, and the lines cut, become
-grown up with tea-tree scrub, a new survey is
-ordered, new pegs are put in, and lines fresh
-cut. I am told that the cost of these repeated
-surveys sometimes exceeds the value of the
-land surveyed, and without for a moment supposing
-that they are unnecessary or useless, one
-cannot help thinking that the money spent in
-resurveying outlying and comparatively uninhabited
-districts, would be more judiciously
-expended in making good roads in those places
-that are already settled.</p>
-
-<p>There have been two surveys at Matakohe
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>over the same ground&mdash;or at any rate in a great
-measure over the same ground&mdash;during the four
-years I have lived there. One of the most
-efficient surveyors on the Government staff, Mr.
-J&mdash;&mdash;, was with his party, at this time encamped
-on the outskirts of Matakohe, and he and his
-assistant, Mr. de C&mdash;&mdash;, called on me, and an
-acquaintance sprang up which greatly helped to
-lessen the dulness of our country life.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. J&mdash;&mdash; was fond of shooting, and whenever
-a day could be spared, we went out together
-with our guns. When I first became friendly
-with him&mdash;in April&mdash;pheasant shooting had
-not commenced, so we confined our attention to
-the wild fowl, the season for which had already
-opened, in consequence of the breeding time
-having been unusually early. The Acclimatisation
-Society has the power to alter the shooting
-season as it deems advisable, but the season for
-both native and imported game, usually extends
-from the 1st of May to the end of July. We
-enjoyed two or three good days' sport together,
-but the best I have ever had up here, was
-towards the end of April.</p>
-
-<p>On this particular day, Mr. J&mdash;&mdash; rode in by
-appointment to have some godwit shooting, and
-as soon as the incoming tide reached my landing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-wharf, we embarked in my punt with our
-dogs, guns, luncheon, &amp;c., in order to have
-some shooting before the flats became covered.
-I took with us one of my boys, a capital hand
-with the sculls, and his duty was to paddle
-the punt as quietly as possible, when we were
-coming up to birds, while my friend and myself
-placed ourselves as well as we could out of
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>We first steered for a point about a quarter
-of a mile off, on which we could distinguish
-birds of some description. Mangrove grew in
-the shallow water off this point, and these I was
-careful to make use of, as a screen, as long as
-possible. As we neared the last one, I handed
-my boy the sculls, and crouched down in the
-stem, while Mr. J&mdash;&mdash; followed my example in
-the stern. Presently the last shelter was passed,
-and we came in full sight and range of a large
-flock of godwit. Up they rose to seek safety
-in flight, but the music of our guns rang out,
-feathers flew in all directions, and the dogs had
-their work cut out for some time. We dropped
-fifteen and a half brace with the three shots
-we got in; and when they were all bagged, we
-hoisted the sail, as a nice breeze was blowing,
-and shaped our course for a point called the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>Tent Rock, where I knew godwit, red-shanked
-plover, and other birds loved to congregate.</p>
-
-<p>When within about a quarter of a mile, the
-sail was lowered, my boy again took the sculls,
-and Mr. J&mdash;&mdash; and myself laid up in the punt.
-In spite, however, of all our precautions, we only
-secured there a brace of red-shanked plover, a
-black duck, and a couple of New Zealand sandpipers.
-We now sailed away with a leading
-breeze for an island lying about three miles
-distant, which is only covered at high water,
-adding a couple of duck and a brace and a half
-of red-shanked plover to our bag on the way.
-On the island we had some grand sport, as the
-tide was by this time over all the flats, and the
-birds did not like leaving the only feeding place
-remaining to them.</p>
-
-<p>After bagging nine or ten brace of godwit and plover we turned
-for home, quite satisfied with our day's shooting, and anxious to
-fetch my place before the tide had receded from the beach. This
-we succeeded in doing, and had barely reached the house with our
-load of birds when rain began to fall, and was soon descending in
-torrents. As the next day was Sunday, and of course a day of rest
-for the surveyors, we <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139"
-id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>easily persuaded Mr. J&mdash;&mdash; to
-sleep at our house. All the evening and through the night the downpour
-continued, and on Sunday morning, when it was still raining hard, Mr.
-J&mdash;&mdash; told me he felt rather anxious about his men, as they
-were encamped close to a stream in a valley, with high hills on either
-side. His anxiety turned out to be well founded, for on that Saturday
-night, as Mr. de C&mdash;&mdash;, the assistant-surveyor, and the three
-men were fast asleep, the stream overflowed its bank, and the water
-gradually rising at last washed their tents away, and they awoke to
-find the flood level with their beds, and a bitterly cold rain pelting
-down on them.</p>
-
-<p>A surveyor's camp bed is constructed usually
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Four tea-tree stakes for legs are driven well
-in the ground, and cut off at a convenient height
-above it. A couple of sacks with holes cut in
-each corner of the bottom are then stretched on
-two six foot stakes passed through the holes,
-and these stakes are nailed securely on the top
-of those driven in the ground, thus forming the
-bed, on which is laid either dried ferns or
-Mongi-mongi as a mattress. The tents that
-were washed away were recovered uninjured,
-and beyond the loss of a tin pot or two, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>wetting of some boots and clothes, no great
-damage was done, as Mr. J&mdash;&mdash; had luckily
-planted his tent, containing the instruments,
-maps, &amp;c., on high ground beyond the reach
-of flood.</p>
-
-<p>Being flooded out, I am told, is by no means
-an uncommon occurrence in the lives of Zealand
-Government surveyors. Compelled to camp near
-running water, as of course they cannot spare
-the time to sink wells, and have no water
-tanks, sudden floods often overtake even the
-most wary. Indeed, being flooded out, working
-up to the knees in mud and water, swimming
-rivers, climbing almost impossible mountains,
-subsisting on the pith of the Nikau palm when
-provisions run out and cannot be renewed,
-rheumatic pains, fevers and agues, may be all
-said to fall within the usual experience of the
-New Zealand Government surveyor, and to
-become qualified to enjoy these experiences a
-special training is required, and a stiff examination
-has to be passed. There is no guarantee
-of the permanency of the appointment, and no
-retiring pensions are granted.</p>
-
-<p>A young man may waste several of the best
-years of his life studying for the post of Government
-surveyor, which he may obtain only to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>dispossessed of on the plea of retrenchment.
-The colony being so young, presents few openings
-for educated men to make a start in life. I
-sincerely trust, however, it will have something
-more promising to offer the rising generation
-when their time comes to go forth into the
-world.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>THE KAURI GUMDIGGER.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I am</span> going to commence this chapter by confessing
-that I find myself in a difficulty. All
-my endeavours to secure an appointment had
-proved abortive. I am anxious to stick to fact,
-and at the same time to interest my reader,
-but how can it be done, if I simply relate
-the details of my humdrum life as a country
-settler!</p>
-
-<p>Three or four chapters back, I rushed off
-from my narrative into the New Zealand forests,
-and then apologised, but I can't keep perpetually
-apologising, and to prevent the reader from
-closing my book in disgust, I must ask him to
-hold me excused if I frequently bolt off the
-even course of my clodhoppery existence into
-subjects which are more interesting.</p>
-
-<p>I have already briefly described one of North
-Auckland's greatest industries&mdash;the Kauri
-timber trade&mdash;an industry, alas! of destruction,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>and one whose days are numbered. There is
-another great industry which also owes its
-existence to the Kauri, both of the present and
-of bygones times. I mean the Kauri gum
-trade. This being the land of the glorious
-Kauri pine for all ages, of course forms the
-"Tom Tiddler's" ground of the happy-go-lucky
-gumdiggers, of whom there are at the
-present time over ten thousand in the North
-Auckland district. About £350,000 worth of
-Kauri gum was exported last year from the
-province of Auckland, principally to London
-and America. It is used largely in the manufacture
-of varnish and lacquers, and as there
-are no varnish manufactories of any importance
-in New Zealand, all the gum is sent
-away.</p>
-
-<p>The three principal exports of the province
-of Auckland are Kauri gum, gold, and timber,
-and the export value of the former is greater
-than the combined values of the gold and
-timber. The gumdigger therefore plays a most
-important part in the province of Auckland, as
-without his assistance its export trade would
-look very shady, yet he is universally looked
-down upon by the sober-sided settler, who
-hardly ever has a good word for him. "He's
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>only a gumdigger," is an expression I have
-commonly heard used, to imply that the individual
-indicated was a person of no importance.</p>
-
-<p>The title "Gumdigger" itself may have something
-to do with the matter. It is not a nice
-word, and looks too much like "Gravedigger" at
-first sight. Possibly, too, the sedate settler may
-not think digging gum so intellectual and high-toned
-an employment as digging potatoes, fattening
-pigs, and the other duties which fall to
-his lot; again, the gumdigger proper is not a
-landowner; and yet again, he is often addicted
-to what he terms "going on the spree," and when
-he has changed his gum into money, to changing
-the money into strong waters. All these causes,
-I think, conspire together to lower him in the
-eyes of the extremely respectable, but ofttimes
-narrow-minded settler.</p>
-
-<p>I have not the slightest wish to endeavour to
-defend the gumdigger for the intemperance and
-careless waste of money that too generally characterises
-him, but I will say, and say it without fear of
-contradiction, that he is exposed to far greater
-temptations than ever beset the settler. He
-lives an entirely isolated and a fearfully
-hard life out on the gum-field, and when he
-comes into a township, which he probably does
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>every two or three months, and converts his
-gum into money, the temptation "to go on
-the spree" is great. He is unmarried, and has
-no particular use for the surplus money after
-his "tucker" bill is paid, and he spends it recklessly.
-There are savings-banks, it is true, but
-no one calls his attention to the fact that by
-depositing his surplus cash in them it will be
-making money for him while he is out on the
-gum-field, and the probability is that he does
-not know of their existence. The settler has
-a hundred improvements to make on his land,
-and has plenty of ways of employing his spare
-cash. Besides, he is generally surrounded by
-his family, and has not to endure the horrible
-isolation in which most of the gumdiggers'
-time is spent.</p>
-
-<p>Not all gumdiggers, however, waste their substance.
-Many when they indulge in a holiday,
-enjoy themselves in a moderate and becoming
-manner. Not long since I was rowing by
-the Matakohe Wharf, and saw a stout, thick-set
-man, whom I knew to be a gumdigger, fishing
-off its seaward end. His legs were dangling
-over the edge, his back was resting against one
-of the mooring posts, in his mouth was a short
-clay, and by his side stood a bottle of beer and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>a tumbler. His face wore a look of placid contentment,
-and he was evidently enjoying himself thoroughly.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_146.jpg" alt="" width="399" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">A Gumdigger's Holiday.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Gumdigging is exceptionally hard work, and
-only a man accustomed to manual labour can
-hope to be successful at it. Some intelligence
-too and power of observation is required, in
-order that the digger may not waste time working<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-in unlikely places. When an old Kauri
-tree dies and falls, its huge roots throw up a
-mound of earth, and the shape of these mounds
-indicate to an observing digger the direction in
-which the trees have fallen, although all signs of
-the trees themselves have entirely decayed away
-and disappeared, perhaps thousands of years ago.
-As the gum generally exudes freely from the
-Kauri, and collects in the forks where the trunk
-commences to throw out branches, by stepping
-sixty or seventy feet from the mound in the
-right direction, and digging there, gum will
-probably be found. The mounds themselves
-also offer good chances, and these are generally
-first attacked.</p>
-
-<p>A gumdigger's outfit is not an expensive
-one. It consists of a spade, a gum spear, and a
-piece of sacking made into a bag and strapped
-on his back with pieces of flax.</p>
-
-<p>The gum spear is a four-sided rod of steel,
-about four feet long, and pointed at one end. It
-looks very like a fencing foil, with a handle
-like a spade stuck in the end of it, instead of a
-hilt. If the field is a new one, or has been but
-little worked, this instrument is brought into
-use, and with it the gumdigger probes the
-ground in different directions, until he strikes a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>piece of gum, which, if at all experienced, he can
-tell at once from a stone, root, or other substance.
-He then digs it up, puts it in the bag,
-and recommences spearing. An old observing
-hand generally does a good deal less spearing
-than a new chum, but a good deal more putting
-in the bag. When a field has been dug over two
-or three times, as most of them have been now,
-the big lumps have nearly all been removed,
-and the method then adopted is to dig in the
-most likely places, on the chance of turning up
-gum with the earth. Here the observing digger
-again gets the pull, for instead of digging a
-patch right out as many do, he digs a spitful
-here and a spitful there, and generally manages
-to turn up gum.</p>
-
-<p>My theory is, that by minutely examining the
-places where gum is turned up, and comparing
-it with the surrounding ground, the wide-awake
-ones have discovered something or other&mdash;I
-don't in the least know what&mdash;which indicates
-to them the most likely places to dig. Anyway,
-it is a fact that some gumdiggers earn their two
-and three pounds a week, while others working
-equally hard, if not harder, in the field, can
-scarcely pay their "tucker" bill.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_149.jpg" alt="" width="310" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Group of Tree-Gummers under Kauri.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_151.jpg" alt="" width="512" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Gum Scraping.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the gum has been dug up, it has to be <span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a><br /><a
-name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>scraped, and this is
-generally done by the gumdigger before he offers it for sale. If an
-industrious man, his evenings are usually spent at this tedious work;
-and the more successful his day's digging, the more scraping lies
-before him in the evening, and it is considered a good ten hours'
-work to scrape a hundredweight of gum. When it is thoroughly scraped,
-it is easy to see the quality, and it is then sorted into boxes. The
-rarest kind is quite transparent and resembles lumps of glass; the
-next in order, is cloudy in places, yellowish looking, and very <span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>like
-amber, though much more brittle; some again is all cloudy, and the
-commonest sort of all is almost opaque. The clearer it is the higher
-its value, and the price for the first class, which is used in the
-manufacture of copal varnishes, ranges from about £70 to £80 a ton,
-according as the market is over or under stocked.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_152.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="165" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Gum Scraper's Knife, constructed so that<br />
-blade can be replaced when worn out.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Very pretty ornaments can be cut with a pen-knife
-out of Kauri gum, the surface of which
-may be afterwards easily polished by being
-rubbed with a piece of flannel soaked in
-kerosine oil. In most of the gumdiggers'
-huts (or whares, as they are called), and in
-settlers' houses in gumdigging districts, are to
-be found specimens of amateur gum-carving,
-among which, hearts are by far the most popular
-subject. I have seen flat hearts with sharp
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>edges, rounded hearts, lob-sided hearts, elongated
-hearts, and many other varieties of Kauri
-gum hearts, which, though doubtless greatly
-admired by the personal friends of the carvers,
-could not be said to possess any commercial
-value. The material is too fragile for elaborate
-and artistic designs to be attempted, and no
-trade of any extent in Kauri gum carvings is
-pushed in the colony.</p>
-
-<p>All the gum dug out of the gum-fields of
-course belonged to Kauri trees of bygone
-ages, and is sometimes called fossil gum. From
-the living Kauri, however, gum is constantly
-exuding, and forming in large lumps in the
-forks of the branches. To secure this it is
-necessary to climb the tree; but the barrel being
-of such huge dimensions, and rising like a pillar
-for sixty or seventy feet, it cannot be climbed
-in the ordinary manner. The plan generally
-adopted, therefore, is to tie a small weight to a
-long piece of strong twine or fishing-line, and
-throw the weight over the branches; the end
-of the thread held below is then slacked out
-until the weight is lowered within reach, when
-a rope is tied to the line, and hauled up over
-the branch and down again the other side.
-Climbing this rope, the gum-seeker gains a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>footing on the branch, and with a tomahawk,
-hacks out the gum and lets it fall to the
-ground. I have heard of another method of
-climbing by means of steps cut with a tomahawk
-in the barrel of a Kauri, but have never
-seen it done, and should think it an exceedingly
-dangerous operation. Climbing for gum
-in the ordinary way with a rope is dangerous
-work enough, and very often men meet their
-death when engaged in the occupation. Only
-a few weeks back the dead body of a native
-was found in the bush about four miles from
-here, lying at the foot of a Kauri, the rope
-dangling from a branch overhead, clearly indicating
-the manner of his death. Tree gum is
-not so valuable as the ordinary gum found in
-the ground, but it can be obtained in much
-larger lumps, and a good tree climber can make
-on the average between three and four pounds
-a week.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_155.jpg" alt="" width="315" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Climbing Kauri for Gum.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Kauri gum industry cannot be considered as an unmixed
-blessing to the province of Auckland, inasmuch as it materially
-helps to keep up the price of labour. If a man cannot get the wages
-he wants, away he goes to the gum-fields, and although he probably
-only makes enough to just keep himself <span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a><br /><a name="Page_157"
-id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>alive, still he is his own master, and
-is always looking forward to doing better. The life he leads when
-gumdigging is a fearfully lonely one, and he would really be far
-happier and far better off, if he were working regularly for moderate
-wages at some factory, with mates around him, and a comfortable cottage
-to spend his evenings in, when his day's work is over.</p>
-
-<p>The North New Zealand working-man cannot see this at present,
-however, and until he is forced to see it, the natural industries of
-the province of Auckland can never be developed.</p>
-
-<p>Take, for instance, the varnish-making industry. Although New
-Zealand is the only country in the whole world which produces Kauri
-gum&mdash;one of the most important ingredients in varnish&mdash;yet it
-is all sent away in its crude state, for other countries to derive the
-benefits and profits consequent on its manufacture into varnish.</p>
-
-<p>Before closing the chapter, I must say a word concerning the honesty
-of gumdiggers. Within a radius of twenty miles from here, there are
-several hundred men engaged in the occupation, and within that same
-radius we only possess two rural policemen. In spite of this <span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>feeble
-protection, however, I have never during my residence in the district,
-heard of a robbery being committed by a gumdigger, although many
-scarcely earn enough to keep themselves alive.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A STORY OF A BUSHRANGER.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">We</span> are indeed very seldom troubled in the North
-Kaipara district with thieves or burglars. No one
-ever thinks of bolting a door, nor do people hesitate
-to vacate their habitations for two or three
-days, leaving them entirely tenantless and unguarded.
-There are no wolves among us; we are
-all lambs (I was going to say sheep, but I won't).</p>
-
-<p>This was the state of things, until a sort of
-amateur bushranger started business in the district,
-about eighteen months ago, and upset all
-our feelings of security. He was not a gumdigger,
-however, but a labourer employed by a
-gentleman sheep farming in Matakohe. As correspondent
-for the <cite>Auckland Weekly News</cite>, I
-sent the Editor the following account concerning
-his little enterprise:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">"<span class="smcap">A North Kaipara Bushranger.</span></p>
-
-<p>"An individual has for some time past been
-wandering about the different settlements here,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>whose doings do not at all meet with the
-approval of the inhabitants. He has contracted
-an unpleasant habit of visiting houses at the
-witching hour of midnight, and extracting from
-the larders whatever comestibles he finds to his
-taste. His penchant for sweetmeats of all kinds
-is remarkable. He would risk his liberty for a
-bottle of lollies, while the sight of a jam tart
-would draw him through a plate-glass window.
-This gentleman rejoices in many names, Sullivan
-being the one he at present patronises. Last
-week he visited Paparoa and Maungaturoto,
-and regaled himself at several establishments.
-On Saturday he called at Mr. D.'s. store, Maungaturoto,
-the owner being engaged elsewhere.
-Sullivan, unwilling to disturb him, broke open
-the door, and captured a bottle of prime bulls'-eyes
-and some other articles. He next made a
-short stay at the Doctor's, but what he secured
-there I have not heard. Some time last week
-he honoured Mr. B. of Paparoa with a visit,
-took all the loose cash he could find, a jar full
-of sweet jelly, and a batch of bread, leaving a
-stale loaf in its place. Finding that creeping
-through windows, hiding in holes, and sleeping
-in the tea-tree scrub had had a very
-deteriorating effect on his clothes, he applied
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>to Mr. H.'s store, Pahi, during the proprietor's
-absence, and selecting a suit to his satisfaction,
-left without a word. Last Sunday he was
-reported to have reached Matakohe, and probably
-his presence will be felt by some of the
-settlers before long. Naturally, his movements
-have excited, and still excite, a good deal of
-notice and criticism, and a few weeks back
-some settlers, taking an unfavourable view of
-his peculiar free-and-easy mode of existence,
-applied to a local constable to come and put
-a stop to his little game. In due course this
-functionary arrived, and a sigh of relief went
-through the several settlements&mdash;an arm of
-the law was with us, and confidence was restored.</p>
-
-<p>"The energy displayed by this officer was indeed most reassuring.
-No sooner did he hear of a settler's house having been entered the
-previous night, than he was off at once to the place. No sooner did the
-news reach him of another depredation being committed elsewhere, than
-away he went again, and at last succeeded in capturing&mdash;not the
-man&mdash;but some mementoes of his travels. The story goes, that he
-very nearly captured the man himself, and would have done so, if the
-man, who is very powerfully <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162"
-id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>built, had not unfortunately captured
-him instead. It was in this way. Having sighted his proposed captive,
-our energetic and plucky local official immediately gave chase, and
-was evidently gaining ground, when the pursued suddenly crouched down
-in some tea-tree scrub. 'Now I have him,' thought the exulting rural
-representative of the law, and in another instant he was on the back,
-and his hand was on the collar, of the larder-breaking Sullivan, while
-in a voice of thunder he shouted, 'I arrest you in the name of the
-law.' Had the midnight prowler any sense of decency and the fitness
-of things, now was the time to show it by resigning himself quietly
-to his fate and the majesty of the law. But no! the bump of reverence
-must indeed be wanting in the cranium of this sweet-toothed bushranger,
-for instead of thus comporting himself, he actually (so runs the
-tale) passed his hand over the constable's shoulder, grasped his coat
-collar, and raising himself from is stooping posture, marched off with
-the highly indignant officer kicking and struggling on his back. On
-arriving at a creek, he shot the representative of the law over his
-shoulder into the water like a sack of coals, and retired into the bush
-to suck lollipops. After this episode our <span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>rural official returned
-to his home (eighteen miles away) to consider what was best to be done,
-leaving word, however, at Paparoa that should the knight of the jam
-tarts and bulls'-eyes be seen anywhere, he was to be detained until our
-rural official could come over to arrest him. Mr. Sullivan has made
-his presence felt several times since, but there always seems to be a
-difficulty about inducing him to remain in any one place sufficiently
-long to call in the services of our rural officer. Another rural
-officer from the Wairoa has now come forward, and is at present at
-Maungaturoto, while Sullivan is here. By the time the rural officer
-arrives here, the wily Sullivan will probably be at Pahi. If he could
-only be induced to partake of some carefully doctored jam tart, I think
-the rural officer would be more evenly handicapped. As it is, unless
-our volatile visitor gets a sunstroke, or accidentally chokes himself
-with a bull's eye, I fear a good many more larders will be emptied and
-a good many more jam tarts reported missing before he is safely placed
-under lock and key in Mount Eden Jail."</p></div>
-
-<p>This lollipop-sucking bushranger for several
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>weeks completely baffled all efforts to arrest
-him, and pursued with impunity his meteoric
-course, leaving behind him a well-defined train
-composed of jam tins, lolly bottles, pie dishes,
-infuriated settlers, and rural policemen. He
-was finally captured near Helensville, about
-sixty miles from here, and in due course brought
-before the magistrates at Pahi, who committed
-him for trial. I rode over to be present at the
-hearing of the case, and in returning after dark,
-my horse shied, the saddle, too loosely girthed,
-slipped round, and I was thrown, the result
-being concussion of the brain. An acquaintance,
-a Paparoa settler, got me home somehow or
-other, and for three days my mind was wandering,
-during which time my poor wife had to
-attend to me entirely unaided, as on the very
-day of my accident she had dismissed our servant
-girl for dishonesty. The principal storekeeper
-in Matakohe kindly came at once, offered his
-services, and telegraphed for the doctor, who
-unfortunately was engaged attending a serious
-case at a distance. When he did arrive he
-said my wife had done everything he could
-have done, and that I was going on all right.
-It was months, however, before I could get about
-again, and neither my wife nor myself are likely
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>to easily forget the North Kaipara bushranger,
-now safely installed in Mount Eden Jail, and
-about half way through the term of three years'
-imprisonment with hard labour to which he
-was sentenced.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>SPORTS.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">A grand</span> opportunity for an energetic bushranger
-might be found on the Pahi regatta and
-sports day, generally held in January. Then
-every one, masters, mistresses, children, and
-servants turn out, and leave houses and their
-contents to look after themselves. It is one of
-the chief events we look forward to in our uneventful
-lives up here, and a most sociable and
-enjoyable day is always spent, for every one seems
-light-hearted and happy on a Pahi sports day.
-Luncheon parties are given on board cutters,
-owned by neighbouring settlers, and moored so
-as to command a good view of the races; picnic
-parties are held on the bright shelly beach,
-while the settlers who live in the township
-itself keep open house.</p>
-
-<p>Our punt usually conveys us to the scene of
-gaiety, distant about four miles by water, though
-over twelve by land. It was on our first visit
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>on a regatta day that I became acquainted with
-a singular colonial institution known by the
-name of "planting." My introduction came
-about in this way. I had not long disembarked
-my wife and children at the township, after a
-somewhat boisterous trip, when a gentleman
-whose acquaintance I had lately made came up,
-and after shaking hands with us all, whispered
-mysteriously in my ear that he had a plant near,
-and wished me to come with him. Having
-secured seats for my party, I followed, wondering
-what sort of plant it could possibly be that
-required mentioning in such strangely subdued
-tones. My conductor soon came to a clump of
-tea tree, where, stooping down, he commenced
-groping about among the undergrowth, and at
-last produced a bottle containing some liquid,
-which I shortly after discovered to be brandy
-and water. What a curious plant! and in what
-a curious position to find it! The tea tree
-(symbolical of blue ribbonism) protecting and
-sheltering the deadly brandy and water plant.
-Here is food for reflection indeed, but let it
-pass! There were plants (of the class alcoholic)
-in all directions that day, from the humble beer
-to the haughty three star brandy plant.</p>
-
-<p>An hotel has since been opened in Pahi, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>there is now no necessity for planting, though
-the system&mdash;which will doubtless strike with
-horror some of my readers&mdash;is still in vogue in
-most country districts on the occasion of any
-public gathering. In common justice, I am
-bound to say that I saw no one on that day
-at Pahi the slightest degree the worse for the
-peculiar gardening operations; in fact, unless
-like a bee gathering honey from flower to flower,
-some thirsty soul had made a round of the
-plants, which he could only do on receiving
-a general invitation from the proprietors, they
-were harmless enough, and the system must
-be regarded simply as a method adopted by
-colonials to show good fellowship.</p>
-
-<p>To return to the regatta. Three or four
-hundred persons were by this time assembled.
-My wife had joined, by invitation, a party of
-ladies&mdash;the wives of some of Mr. Hay's heroes in
-"Brighter Britain"&mdash;on board one of the moored
-yachts, and I leave her deeply engaged in that
-enjoyment so dear to most ladies&mdash;a good
-gossip&mdash;and stroll on to the wharf to see the
-cutter race started. After some little delay, and
-a good deal of shouting, the seven boats entered
-for the contest are in position, the gun is fired
-from the umpire's boat for the start, and they all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>become suddenly covered with canvas, and are
-off. It is blowing half a gale&mdash;but what care
-they. Up go their gaff topsails, and the boats
-careen over until you can almost see their keels.
-Most of them carry extra hands for ballast, and
-this live ballast hangs itself over the windward
-rail. Away they go, till they look like toy
-yachts in the distance. Now they round the
-buoy, and beat up for home. One boat misses
-stays and goes ashore, another carries away
-her topmast, and a third springs her bowsprit
-and gives in. But nobody seems to mind&mdash;every
-one appears happy&mdash;owners of the damaged
-crafts and all. On the wharf, which is crowded,
-a little mild betting goes on, and a gentleman
-(an old Etonian) gets up a shilling sweepstake
-in his hat. Bang goes the gun, as the first
-boat passes the winning post. Bang again,
-and the second boat is in. Then a voice whispers
-in my ear, "Come along, I've got a plant;"
-and I retire with the whisperer, and have a
-glass of ale.</p>
-
-<p>While the cutter race is progressing a rowing match is started, and
-then a punt race is rowed, followed by another sailing race for open
-boats, a Maori race, and a model yacht race. After all the boat events
-have been run off, walking a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170"
-id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>greasy boom fixed out from the end of the
-wharf is indulged in; and after that the landsmen have a turn, and a
-move is made for the greensward, which reaches down to the beach. Here
-are erected hurdles for horse-jumping, in which several Maoris (who
-are great at sports) are competitors; next comes pole leaping, long
-jumping, foot races, &amp;c.; and the sports conclude with an obstacle
-race, in which the competitors have to crawl through bottomless tubs,
-and overcome all sorts of carefully devised impediments to their
-passage. A concert and dance in the public hall conclude a most
-enjoyable day's amusement. At its conclusion, horses are saddled, boats
-and punts got ready, and the assembly melts away, leaving the pretty
-township of Pahi bathed in the glorious light of the full moon, which
-here and there shines brightly on the sapless remains of the now no
-longer regarded colonial alcoholic plants.</p>
-
-<p>Another great break in our monotony up here
-is the Matakohe Annual Race Meeting, in connection
-with which I at present hold the position
-of Hon. Secretary and Treasurer. At our last
-meeting, held in March, about four hundred
-persons assembled on the racecourse, and a
-capital day's sport was enjoyed. We had a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>grand stand capable of seating three hundred,
-refreshment booths, saddling paddock, weighing
-room, a tent for the Secretary, and a Judge's box.
-The jockeys all rode in colours, and the scene
-was altogether a very brilliant and enlivening
-one. The following events were run off during
-the day:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>The Maiden Plate, over a mile and a half
-course. Nine horses started, and winner received
-seven pounds.</p>
-
-<p>Settlers' Race Handicap. Two miles course.
-Six started, and winner received seven pounds.</p>
-
-<p>Handicap Hurdle Race. Two miles course,
-with eight sets of three feet six inch hurdles.
-Four started, and winner received eight pounds
-ten shillings, and second horse one pound five
-shillings.</p>
-
-<p>Hack Hurdles, over a mile and a half course
-and six flights of hurdles. Five started, and
-winner received five pounds.</p>
-
-<p>Maori Race, over a mile and a half course.
-Only three horses started, and winner received
-five pounds.</p>
-
-<p><em>Matakohe Cup Handicap.</em> Two miles. Seven
-started. Winner received thirteen pounds ten
-shillings, and second horse one pound ten
-shillings.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-<p>A Trotting Race, Pony Race, and Consolation
-Handicap, the winners carrying off between
-them twelve pounds, completed the events of
-the day.</p>
-
-<p>Order was sustained by half the police force
-in the whole district, consisting of one constable
-of portly dimensions, backed by an imposing
-uniform and a shako. The money
-for the prizes was supplied by the takings
-at the gates, the nomination and acceptance
-fees, and the subscriptions of the members of
-the Club. There was no betting beyond a few
-shilling sweepstakes got up in the old Etonian's
-hat. No drunkenness disturbed the harmony
-of the day, or the equanimity of our stalwart
-protector. Legitimate sport, and nothing else,
-called us together, and legitimate sport we
-enjoyed to our hearts' content.</p>
-
-<p>I am confident that great good results from
-such gatherings as the two I have described&mdash;the
-Pahi Regatta and the Matakohe Races. In
-the former, several of the competing cutters and
-boats, and all the punts, are locally built, and
-wholesome rivalry is excited among the builders,
-tending to improve the class of boat turned out
-by them. In the case of the races, the tendency
-is to improve the breed of horses, and to study
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>more closely the most important animal in the
-colony.</p>
-
-<p>These social gatherings also do good in
-another way, by bringing about a general hand-shaking
-and wiping out for a time of the petty
-jealousies and the miserable little bickerings and
-quarrels that too often exist among a certain
-class in these little settlements. Among such
-people the slightest thing is sufficient to cause
-a break in friendship. If Jones does not vote
-the same way as Brown, smash goes their acquaintance;
-if Robinson afterwards asks the
-discarded Jones to spend the evening, he is
-cut dead by Brown immediately; and if Mrs.
-Robinson appears in chapel with a more gaudy
-bonnet than Mrs. Jones possesses, the demon
-jealousy is at once aroused, and a coolness takes
-place between the two families.</p>
-
-<p>The most active agent, however, in producing
-discord among the settlers is the law relating
-to straying cattle. As it at present stands, no
-compensation can be obtained for damage done
-by straying cattle unless the land trespassed on
-is enclosed by what is termed "a legal fence,"
-which must be of a certain height and of certain
-forms of construction. A summons may
-certainly be taken out for trespass, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>owner of the cattle fined one shilling per head,
-but to do this involves a great loss of time, and
-is very little satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this law is that the man who
-has good feed on his land has to erect fences
-unnecessarily strong for the restraint of his
-own cattle, in order to keep out his neighbour's
-wandering animals. It certainly causes cattle
-to be very cheap, but at the same time does
-great injury to the legitimate farmer, who will
-not take advantage of this miserable piece of
-legislation, and who keeps his paddocks in
-good grass, and his beasts in proper restraint.
-Many settlers systematically breed calves, which,
-when about three months old, they brand with
-their initials, and turn out on the roads to get
-their living as best they may, knowing that if
-they do break into a neighbour's paddock, the
-chances are that they can show he has not a
-legal fence.</p>
-
-<p>Surely it would be more just if the law made
-it compulsory for a man to fence sufficiently to
-keep his own cattle in, and not oblige him to
-fence to keep other people's out. Suppose twelve
-men take up land near together, only one of
-whom owns cattle, while the others crop and
-grow fruit trees, does it not seem grossly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>unjust that, in order to place themselves in a
-position to obtain damages, the eleven should
-be obliged to erect legal fences round their
-properties to keep out the twelfth man's cattle?
-Yet this is the law as it stands at present in
-New Zealand, and any change in it would
-probably meet with a great amount of opposition.
-We pay dearly enough for our laws out
-here, however, and the motto of all law-makers
-should be <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Fiat justitia ruat cœlum</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>SYSTEM OF GOVERNMENT IN NEW ZEALAND.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">At</span> the end of my last chapter I remarked that
-we pay dearly enough for our laws out here,
-and I will now try and explain my reasons for
-so thinking. In my humble opinion, we are
-altogether over-governed, and that this is one
-of the reasons why so many of our enterprises
-turn out commercially unsuccessful, and also
-why we do not make our own varnish, our own
-furniture, and do not push many other industries,
-for the prosecution of which the colony possesses
-exceptional advantages. We seem to be playing
-at being a big nation&mdash;a second Great Britain
-in fact&mdash;while our entire population does not
-reach the population of one of England's first-class
-towns.</p>
-
-<p>Besides His Excellency the Governor, we
-have a Premier, styled an "Honourable," with a
-salary of £1750 a year, a ministerial residence,
-travelling and other allowances; six Cabinet
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>ministers holding portfolios, receiving each a
-salary of £1250 a year, a ministerial residence,
-travelling and other allowances, and each styled
-an Honourable; one minister without portfolio,
-receiving a salary of £800 a year; a host of
-clerks belonging to the different ministerial
-departments, with salaries from £800 a year
-downwards; an attorney-general, solicitor-general,
-and several law officers; a Legislative
-Council, consisting at present, I believe, of a
-Speaker, a Chairman of Committee, Clerk to the
-Council, and forty-six members&mdash;each member
-being appointed <em>for life</em>, and receiving 200
-guineas every Parliamentary session, a free pass
-on the railways, and the title "Hon." tacked
-on before his name.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> The Legislative Council is supposed to correspond with the House
-of Lords at home, but is called out here by the irreverent, the Old
-Man's Refuge.</p></div>
-
-<p>Then we have the House of Representatives,
-consisting of a Speaker, Chairman of Committees,
-Clerk of Committees, Clerk of the House,
-Sergeant-at-arms, Clerk of Writs, and ninety
-members. The M.H.R.'s are elected for three
-years, and each receives an honorarium of 200
-guineas a session, a free pass on the railways,
-and has M.H.R. tacked on after his name.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-<p>It is doubtless a very proud and pleasant
-thing to be able to say we have a House of
-Lords, a Sergeant-at-arms, and all that sort of
-thing, but we are paying too dearly for the
-gratification.</p>
-
-<p>In England, with an army and navy to support,
-and a National Debt of about seven hundred
-millions, the general government costs rather
-under fifty shillings per head. Out here, with a
-public debt of thirty-two millions, it costs double,
-though all we possess in the way of army and
-navy consists of one general, a few volunteers,
-and a small steamboat called the <em>Hinamoe</em>
-(<i>i.e.</i>, the sleepy), which, I believe, looks after
-the lighthouses, and carries the "Hons." and
-the "M.H.R.'s" about when they require change
-of air.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to New Zealand's debt, it may
-be remarked that the money borrowed has not
-been thrown away on profitless wars, as is often
-the case with Government loans,&mdash;and that
-although I fear a good deal of money has been
-wasted, still there is something better to show
-than soldier's graves and tattered standards.
-There are telegraph lines, harbours, lighthouses,
-and about sixteen hundred and twenty miles of
-railway, which return at present a net profit of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>nearly three per cent. on their entire cost&mdash;over
-twelve and a half millions&mdash;and would probably
-return considerably more were the charges
-reduced so that farmers, orchardists, and others
-could profitably utilise them as carriers. Last
-year over four millions were expended in governing
-the colony, of which about one million was
-derived from the gross revenue of the railways,
-and three millions squeezed somehow or other
-out of the colonists. About half this sum of
-three millions went to pay interest on the public
-debt, and half the cost of government. It is
-with the latter item that our chance of retrenchment
-at present lies.</p>
-
-<p>The population of the colony last year
-numbered about 620,000, comprised, as nearly
-as I can ascertain, of 120,000 unmarried men,
-women, widows, and widowers, 100,000 married
-men, 100,000 married women, and 300,000
-children. It is clear that the 120,000 unmarried,
-and the 100,000 married men, have between them
-to pay, directly and indirectly, the whole sum
-necessary for the interest on the loans and the
-cost of government. The married man, with
-wife and average allowance of three children,
-has of course to contribute a very much larger
-share than the single individual, who has only
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>himself or herself to support, and I will assume
-that the married man pays three quarters, and
-the unmarried one quarter. The former has
-therefore (without counting local rates) to contribute
-about £22, 10s. annually, half of which
-sum goes to sustain our expensive game of pretending
-to be a big nation.</p>
-
-<p>How can labour be cheap when the above is the case! If the cost
-of government were reduced to one half, the married labouring man
-(and it is he that fixes the rate of wages) could afford to work for
-appreciably less than he now can, the cost of working the railways
-would be diminished, and the revenue from them proportionately
-increased. A sensible reduction in the price of labour would doubtless
-also most beneficially affect the commercial prospects of the colony,
-and probably cause the successful development of its many suitable
-industries.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Froude, in his book "Oceana," talks
-about the possibility of New Zealand repudiating
-her debt, and I trust he will not be angry
-if I say that the information given him on this
-point is about as accurate as the information
-he received concerning Kauri gum, to the effect
-that it was valuable because it made pretty
-ornaments. There is little fear of New Zealand
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>repudiating her debt&mdash;as I think the figures I
-have given show&mdash;but I trust before long she
-will repudiate all the unnecessary paraphernalia
-of government that is weighing her down.</p>
-
-<p>The colony may at present, I think, be
-likened to a goodly fruit tree full of bud and
-promise, but suffering from the ravages of
-host of caterpillars, which are destroying its
-blossoms, and with them the chance of fruit.</p>
-
-<p>A new Government pledged to retrenchment
-has lately been formed, and I trust the promises
-made on the platform will be fulfilled later on
-in Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Since writing the above, the following paragraph
-<em>referring to the late ministry</em> appeared
-among the items of Parliamentary news in the
-<cite>Auckland Evening Star</cite> of December 6, 1887.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">"Ministerial Residences.</span></p>
-
-<p>"The following rather questionable items appear in the
-return of expenditure during the last six months on ministerial
-residences, and have created some comment:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Tinakori Road House (Sir J. Vogel's): Overhauling lift,
-£11, 16s. 8d.; gas-fittings for theatrical stages, £2, 9s.
-11d.; hire of piano, tuning and repairing, £10, 4s.; 12
-dining-room chairs, at 60s., £36; pink and gold breakfast
-set, £3; one spring lounge, £10; hire of piano, £7, 10s.</p>
-
-<p>"Molesworth Street (Hon. E. Richardson's): Re-covering suite in
-plush, £35; knife-cleaning machine, £4, 10s.; <span class="pagenum"><a
-name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>hire of piano, £8, 0s.
-6d.; hire of piano repairing, £3, 5s.; three gas fires, £9; one dinner
-service, £14, 18s.; garden hose and fitting, £4, 1s. 4d.</p>
-
-<p>"Tinakori Road (east) (Hon. J. A. Tole's): One walnut card table,
-£5; two spirit seltzogenes, £5, 2s. 6d.; flower-pots, £1; set best
-hangings, £9; one mangle, £8, 10s.; three pairs curtains, £5, 12s. 6d.;
-one child's bath, £1; packing piano from Christchurch to Wellington,
-£1, 10s.; freight, 9s. 8d."</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>KAIPARA INSECTS.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">This</span> part of New Zealand, as well as suffering
-in common with the rest of the colony from
-the ravages of the political caterpillar, is a
-good deal troubled with other insects, and an
-entomologist would find in the Kaipara rare
-opportunities of prosecuting his studies. Some
-of the specimens are so strange that they cannot
-fail to strike with their peculiarities the
-most unobserving, and I will venture to describe
-two or three of them.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_183.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="289" />
-<p class="caption center p90">The Kauri Bug (life size).</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_184.jpg" alt="" width="323" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">Aweto or Bulrush Caterpillar (two-thirds life size).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Kauri bug (called by the Maoris the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>Kekereru), with its power of emitting a terrible
-and unbearable smell when alarmed, has been
-so often and so fully dealt with by writers, that
-I shall content myself with simply making a
-sketch of the insect, leaving its smell to the
-imagination of my readers, and will proceed to
-describe the most curious of the New Zealand
-native insects I have seen, called the bulrush
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>caterpillar (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sphœria Robertsia</i>)&mdash;native name,
-Aweto. This caterpillar becomes changed into
-a white vegetable substance while still retaining
-its caterpillar shape. It is from three to
-three and a half inches in length, and when
-about to assume the chrysalis form buries itself
-in the ground, and it is supposed that in doing
-so, some of the minute seeds of a fungus become
-inserted between the scales of its neck;
-these the insect, being in a sickly condition, is
-unable to rid itself of, and they vegetate and
-spread through the whole of the body, completely
-filling and changing it entirely into a
-vegetable substance, though retaining exactly
-the caterpillar form, even to the legs, head,
-mandibles, and claws. From the nape of the
-neck shoots one single stem, which grows to a
-height of eight or ten inches, its apex resembling
-very closely the club-headed bulrush in
-miniature. This insect plant is generally found
-growing at the root of the Rata tree. It has
-no leaves, and if the stem by chance becomes
-broken off, another arises in its place, though
-two stems are never found growing simultaneously
-from one caterpillar. When fresh,
-the vegetable substance of which it is composed
-is soft, and has a strong nutty flavour, and the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>natives are fond of eating it; they also use it
-burnt and ground to powder as colouring
-matter for tattooing purposes. In every instance
-the caterpillar is found perfect in shape
-and size, without any sign of contraction or
-decomposition, and it is therefore presumed
-that the vegetating process takes place during
-the insect's life. A section of the insect vegetable
-shows distinctly the intestine passage.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_186.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="173" />
-<p class="caption center p90">The Mantis (life size).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another curious insect found here is the
-"Mantis," commonly called, on account of its
-shape, "the ridge-pole rafter." This insect has
-the power of changing its colour like the
-chameleon. It favours tea-tree more than any
-other plant, and if resting on a withered portion,
-assumes a corresponding brown colour,
-though when found on the young leaves it is a
-bright green. Its shape is most peculiar, and
-very suggestive of the name given it.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_187.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="183" />
-<p class="caption center p90">The Weta, Male (two-thirds life size).</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_187a.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="230" />
-<p class="caption center p90">The Weta, Female (two-thirds life size).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another insect very commonly found in soft
-wood tree is called by the natives the "Weta,"
-but by vulgar little boys "The Jimmy Nipper."
-It is a most repulsive and formidable-looking
-insect, with a body sometimes two and a half
-inches long, and is capable of biting hard
-enough to make blood flow freely. The male
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>and female differ considerably in shape, the
-male being provided with an immense pair of
-jaws. They have no wings, and their bodies are
-covered with a kind of horny shell.</p>
-
-<p>I was engaged felling some dead trees in my
-bush when I first made the acquaintance of
-these uncanny looking insects, and I then discovered
-two specimens in a hollow tree. A
-settler, an old soldier, hailing from the Emerald
-Isle, was assisting me, and I asked him what
-they were called.</p>
-
-<p>"Jimmy Nippers to be shure, sur!" he
-responded; "and by the same token, one's a
-male, and t'other's a faimale."</p>
-
-<p>I inquired if he knew which was which, and
-he replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Bedad, sur, shure that's aisy to see; look
-at the power of jaw in that one&mdash;that's the
-faimale, sur."</p>
-
-<p>I found out afterwards, however, that he
-was wrong, and his mode of reasoning defective,
-and, I fear, hardly complimentary to the
-fair sex.</p>
-
-<p>One of the insects most dreaded by our
-orchardists is an insect called the "Leech,"
-about a third of an inch long, and very like
-a small slug. It sometimes attacks plum and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>pear trees in thousands, and completely denudes
-them of leaves. Shaking wood ashes over the
-trees is a very effective method of getting rid of
-these pests.</p>
-
-<p>During some summers a kind of cricket also
-appears in immense numbers and eats the grass,
-and the bark off the fruit trees. The best
-remedy for these is to keep poultry, which relish
-them immensely, though the crickets in no sense
-return the compliment, as they give the flesh of
-the fowls a disagreeable bitter taste, and render
-them for the time unfit for the table. The eggs
-are not affected, however, and corn is saved,
-which is one point gained. Where crickets are
-undisturbed, they destroy all the grass in their
-neighbourhood, and then turn cannibals and
-eat one another.</p>
-
-<p>We have not, I am happy to say, the dreaded
-Codlin moth up here, although it exists, I believe,
-in some parts of New Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>Another destructive insect is a little brown
-beetle, shaped exactly as the lady bird. This
-insect confines its attention to the stalk end of
-the apple, round which it nibbles, until the
-apple withers and drops off. Last year the
-orchards in the neighbourhood were free from
-this pest, and I hope they have either moved
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>to pastures new, or have been exterminated by
-some of our insect-eating birds.</p>
-
-<p>The spider tribe is very fully represented,
-some specimens being of enormous size. One
-kind is said to be so dangerous that a bite from
-it endangers life. I have never, however, heard
-of any one in the Kaipara having been bitten.</p>
-
-<p>One other insect, called the Mason bee, I
-must mention. This fly builds a nest of a kind
-of white mortar, stocks it with small spiders,
-and lives in solitary state. It lays its eggs in
-the nest, and the stored spiders, which are not
-dead, but appear to have been rendered insensible,
-are for the consumption of its offspring
-when they hatch out. The Mason bee has a
-very venomous sting, and is altogether an undesirable
-visitor, as it builds its habitation in all
-sorts of untoward places, sometimes even in the
-locks of doors.</p>
-
-<p>We have numerous other kinds of insects,
-including a small sort of mosquito, a vicious
-little biting fly called the sandfly, and a locust,
-which, though differing altogether in shape from
-the ordinary locust of the East of Europe, makes
-exactly the same noise when settled on a tree.</p>
-
-<p>My readers will probably think, from the foregoing
-alarming list, that we are an insect-ridden
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>district altogether, but nature has provided us
-with plenty of help to keep down our pests.
-We have a beautiful little bird called the Blight
-bird, as small as some humming birds, which
-lives principally on flies and insects, though
-rather partial at times to grapes and figs; we
-have a bright brown vulture hocked bird&mdash;about
-the size of a lark, barred with brown
-and white on the breast, and with a beautiful
-metallic lustre on its feathers&mdash;which comes in
-flocks, and destroys great quantities of the
-Leech; and we have the imported Chinese
-Pheasant, which helps us greatly in the matter
-of slugs and crickets, though sadly given to
-rooting up crops of maize and potatoes, in consequence
-of which unfortunate habit it is looked
-upon as a deadly enemy by most of the farmers.</p>
-
-<p>I asked my Hibernian naturalist friend one
-day how his potatoes were getting on. "Bedad,
-sur," he replied, "Oi niver had a crop come
-up so quickly; sure Oi'd only planted thim one
-day, and ivery mother's son of thim was up the
-next!"</p>
-
-<p>His field, he afterwards explained, had received
-a visit from the pheasants in force.</p>
-
-<p>In spite, however, of all the wrong-doing laid
-at the pheasant's door, I cannot help thinking
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>it does a great deal more good than harm by
-keeping down slugs, crickets, and other destructive
-insects. I took 126 slugs out of the crop
-of one pheasant, and I have shot many others
-quite as well supplied. They also give us
-many a day's pleasure, and help to keep the
-larder stocked. With a couple of good dogs and
-a "white man" (as a good fellow is called out
-here) for a companion, what more enjoyable
-than a day after the long tails. You have to
-do a good deal of tramping for your sport certainly,
-and you don't generally make a big
-bag, but you never come home empty handed,
-and feel when your day is over that you have
-thoroughly earned the three or four&mdash;or perhaps
-five or six&mdash;brace of birds that are hanging up
-in your safe.</p>
-
-<p>Heavier bags than these are often made,
-though it has not fallen to my lot to make
-them. Last season a young fellow here grassed
-fourteen and a half brace between sunrise and
-midday, and bigger bags than that are even
-sometimes recorded, but they involve to my
-thinking too great an expenditure of labour in
-the way of walking for pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>The full grown cock pheasant in New Zealand
-weighs from three to three and a half pounds,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>and the hen from two to two and three-quarter
-pounds.</p>
-
-<p>There is one kind of shooting (native pigeon
-shooting) that may be indulged in, without any
-walking beyond that necessary to reach the
-shooting ground. All you have to do is to seat
-yourself in the bush under a clump of Taraire
-trees when the berries they bear are ripe, and
-wait for the pigeons to come and feed on them.
-As soon as the birds are settled on the trees,
-and are busy with the berries, you can blaze
-away as hard as you like, for they won't fly
-away or move until you bring them down. It
-is unadulterated pot-shooting, and there is not
-a single iota of sport to be got out of it with
-powder and shot, though with a rook rifle
-there might be some little fun. The Maoris,
-who are, as a rule, bad shots, are very fond of
-pigeon shooting&mdash;they being about the only
-birds they can hit&mdash;and I have seen them returning
-after a day's shooting with two or three
-horse loads of pigeons. The New Zealand bird,
-although looking larger than the English wood
-quest, rarely exceeds a pound and a half in
-weight.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A MAORI WEDDING.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">Bad</span> shots as the Maoris
-are generally considered, they are nevertheless very fond of sport,
-and are great fellows at horse leaping, running matches, and athletic
-amusements of all kinds. They are a fine, intelligent race of people,
-with plenty of fun and spirit in them, and are justly renowned for
-their hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>About two years ago, the marriage of a daughter of one of the
-chief men belonging to a native village a few miles off took place;
-and I, in common with all the settlers in the neighbourhood,
-received an invitation to be present at the ceremony, and to partake
-afterwards of the wedding breakfast. My wife told me it would be
-the right thing to take some little bridal gift, and gave me a fan
-to present which had a good deal of gold and colour about it. I
-wrapped it carefully in some nice tissue paper, and thus accredited,
-rode off to the festive <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195"
-id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>gathering. During the journey, the paper
-in which the fan was enveloped unfortunately became torn, and finally
-disappeared, and conceiving the impression that a horseman in knee
-breeches, spurs, and fan looked somewhat ridiculous, I was anxious
-to get rid of my present as soon as possible. On drawing near to the
-village, therefore, great was my delight to perceive the bride's father
-stationed at the entrance to receive his guests as they arrived, and
-I at once made up my mind to hand the fan over to him, but to my
-disappointment found his knowledge of English was as limited as mine of
-Maori, which consisted of one word, "Kapai," meaning, It is good.</p>
-
-<p>I endeavoured to illustrate the action of the
-fan, and held it towards him, saying at the
-same time, "Kapai." He evidently viewed it
-with distrust, and appeared to think it something
-unholy, or a disguised infernal machine.
-Whenever I held it near him he backed, and
-every time I opened it he jumped. The more
-I cried "Kapai," the more he shied, and we were
-gradually working our way into the village, my
-host backing at every movement of the fan, and
-I leading my horse with one hand, and with
-the other manipulating the wretched bridal gift.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>At last, just as I had made up my mind to
-pitch it away, a Matakohe settler came up who
-could speak Maori, and who soon altered the
-aspect of affairs. The fan was accepted most
-graciously, and was taken the round of the
-Maori belles, each one of whom, when its action
-was explained, had a trial of it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_196.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="413" />
-<p class="caption center p90">He evidently viewed it with distrust.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This helped to fill up the time, until our Church of England
-clergyman&mdash;who was to perform the ceremony&mdash;arrived,
-and we all repaired <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197"
-id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>to a structure erected by the Maoris
-for the occasion, and made of Nikau palm leaves plaited together. The
-inside was very tastefully decorated with ferns and cabbage palms, and
-really did great credit to their artistic taste.</p>
-
-<p>An "Ancient and Modern" hymn, in which the natives heartily joined,
-having been sung, the ceremony was performed in Maori, and a second
-hymn closed the service.</p>
-
-<p>The bride and bridegroom then led the way
-to another construction of Nikau leaves, where
-the wedding breakfast was prepared. The happy
-couple took the head of the table, and the
-"Pakehas" (<i>i.e.</i>, the white men, literally
-"strangers"), were invited to first sit down,
-the Maoris waiting on them. The feast was
-ample, and consisted of wild pig, beef, vegetables,
-and plum pudding. When the Pakeha
-visitors had eaten their fill of the good things,
-the Maoris had their innings, and then the
-health of the bride and bridegroom, who still
-retained their position at the head of the table,
-was drunk in Gilbey's Castle A Claret, the toast
-being proposed by our local J.P., and translated
-by an interpreter to the Maoris. The bride's
-father returned thanks, and every one present
-shook hands with the loving pair and retired.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>Some horse-jumping competitions among the
-natives brought the afternoon to a close, and I
-returned home very pleased with my day with
-the Maoris.</p>
-
-<p>Giving place to their Pakeha guests, and
-seeing them duly satisfied before partaking of
-anything themselves, struck me as showing a
-very keen sense of true hospitality and politeness.
-They have also, I believe, a true appreciation
-of justice&mdash;at least I have often heard
-so, and in the only case which has come under
-my personal observation, the Maori concerned
-showed it in a marked degree. It occurred in
-connection with the race for horses owned by
-Maoris, run at our last meeting. The jockey of
-the leading horse&mdash;an Englishman&mdash;in coming
-up the straight for the post, deliberately pulled
-right across the second horse, thereby nearly
-causing an accident. A protest was entered by
-the owner of the second horse, and the evidence
-having been heard by the committee, it was
-unanimously decided to disqualify the leading
-horse, the second was declared winner, and
-the jockey censured. The leading horse could
-easily have won, and much sympathy was felt
-for its owner, who had lost the race through
-the bedevilment of his jockey.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-<p>When I handed the money to the Maori
-whose horse was pronounced the winner, I
-explained to him, through an interpreter, that
-he had won it simply through the misbehaviour
-of the leading jockey, and expressed my opinion
-that it would be fair to divide the sum with
-the Maori who had been so badly treated. He
-seemed to see the justice of the case at once,
-and without the least hesitation paid over half
-the money.</p>
-
-<p>Civilisation has done, and is doing, great
-things for the Maoris. Among others it has
-taught many to drink, to swear in English, and
-to wear English slop clothes, which are quite
-unsuited to them and their habits, and to the
-use of which, many medical men attribute the
-pulmonary complaints so rife in their midst.
-They are constantly wading through streams, and
-getting wet through by rain, and they let their
-clothes dry on them (as they were accustomed
-to do when their skin formed the principal part
-of their garb), and thus sow the germs of disease,
-and hasten the inevitable day when the Maori
-will have been improved off the face of the
-earth.</p>
-
-<p>No cannibalism exists, I believe, among them
-at the present time, though there are natives
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>living who have indulged in it, and smack their
-lips at the thought. They say white men are
-too salt to be much good for the table, though
-young Pakeha children they pronounce to be
-"Kapai."</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXV.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>SYSTEM OF EDUCATION IN NEW ZEALAND.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">I must</span> not lay down my pen without saying
-something about the New Zealand educational
-system, one of the best features in our colonial
-government, though possessing undoubtedly its
-faults.</p>
-
-<p>The educational course is divided into three
-grades, viz., the elementary or public schools,
-the secondary or high schools, and finally the
-university. For the two latter, fees have to be
-paid, unless the scholar is clever and lucky
-enough to obtain a scholarship, in which case
-he or she can go through the whole course
-without any expense to the parents.</p>
-
-<p>In regard to securing a scholarship, however,
-besides ability being necessary on the part of
-the pupil, a good deal depends on the capability
-of the teacher at the elementary school.
-This is an uncertain element, and constitutes, to
-my thinking, a flaw in the educational system.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>Teachers at the elementary schools are supposed
-to pass examinations, and receive certificates
-of competency, but in the small up-country
-districts, teachers are often placed in
-charge who are not certificated, but are what
-are termed probationers. It is true that in
-each school-district, a committee is elected by
-the inhabitants, whose duty it is to attend to
-matters connected with the school and the
-teacher, and to report all irregularities to the
-head school board in Auckland. Very often,
-however, the members of these committees are
-uneducated men, sometimes even being unable
-to read or write, and it may be imagined that
-they are not held in much awe by the teacher,
-who does in such cases pretty well as he or
-she likes. Also, as the salary of the teacher is
-regulated by the average number of children
-attending the school, a good competent man
-naturally objects to a small district, and the
-consequence is, that the children in the country
-are not so well educated as the children in
-large towns.</p>
-
-<p>This is a serious flaw in the working of the
-education scheme, but it is one that might
-possibly be overcome by the institution of
-Government boarding-houses in towns like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>Auckland, where the children of country people
-who cannot afford to pay for private tuition,
-but who wish their little ones to be as well
-educated as possible, might be lodged at cost
-price by the Government. Another flaw, to my
-mind, in the system, is not allowing the Bible
-to be read in the schools, the result being that
-many children are allowed to grow up without
-any knowledge of their God or their Saviour,
-their parents naturally inferring that if it is
-considered unnecessary and unwise to teach
-Bible truths in the schools, there can be no
-necessity to teach them at home, even if they
-are able to, which in many cases they are not.
-Freethought and Deism has taken strong root
-in the province of Auckland, and I think the
-cause may probably be traced to the expulsion
-of the Bible from the New Zealand Government
-schools.</p>
-
-<p>To counteract the evil effects of this blot in
-our educational system, we have our Church of
-England parsons, our Roman Catholic priests,
-and Wesleyan and Dissenting ministers of
-various denominations. In this district we are
-very fortunate in our Church of England
-parson, who is not only a gentleman, but is a
-conscientious and energetic man, as well as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>an agreeable and amusing companion. He has
-an immense deal of riding to get through, as his
-district is a very extensive one, containing about
-800 square miles, and in the winter, when some
-of the roads are knee-deep in mud, his experiences
-must be at times terrible. He wears the
-orthodox dog collar, a clerical cut coat, riding
-trousers, and top-boots with the tops off, and
-thus accoutred, he travels about regardless of
-the weather, and unremitting in his endeavour
-to counteract evil, in whatever shape or form he
-meets it. He does not always spare himself
-time even to get his hair cut properly, for not
-long ago I saw him seated on a gentleman's
-verandah with a sack over his shoulders, while
-his friend, the owner of the house, was shearing
-him with a pair of sheep shears.</p>
-
-<p>While we are thus happily provided with
-regard to our souls, our bodily welfare is not
-neglected, and our local doctor&mdash;a genial son of
-Erin, and a great favourite on all sides&mdash;rivals
-the parson in tending to our wants connected
-with his department. He also has an immense
-amount of riding to do, and is as much at home
-in the pigskin as some men are in their easy
-chairs. A forty-mile ride to see a patient he
-regards as a little holiday, and pulls up smiling
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>at the finish. He is married, and in that respect
-scores against our parson. He is fond of
-sport, keeps his own hacks, a couple of racers,
-his double-barrelled central fire, and a brace of
-setters. He sings a good song (hunting ones are
-his favourites), is clever at his profession and
-attentive to his patients, and, in short, is what
-is known as a good all round man. I think
-I am therefore entitled to say that the North
-Kaipara settler, both body and soul, is in good
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>The parson and the doctor are the two busiest
-professional men in this part of the world,
-although the doctor's practice is principally
-confined to accidents and additions to families.
-The Auckland lawyers perhaps have a fairish
-share of work at times, in connection with North
-Kaiparians, but engineers, to use a colonialism,
-have not a "show" at all&mdash;particularly now
-that the borrowing policy has been partially
-given up.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>A MEETING OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">About</span> a year ago the Government decided to
-create a new county, which was to be formed
-of the riding in which I reside, together with
-seven others. With this object eight councillors
-were elected for the eight different
-ridings. A meeting of these gentlemen took
-place to carry out the intentions of the Government,
-and to appoint certain officers. This was
-the first meeting of the Council, and I rode over
-in order to be present.</p>
-
-<p>A large hall&mdash;at one end of which was a kind
-of stage&mdash;was hired for the occasion, and on the
-stage stood a good-sized table, supplied with
-pens, ink, and paper, and surrounded by eight
-stout chairs&mdash;one for each councillor. By one
-o'clock "the trusted of the people" had all
-arrived and taken their seats with countenances
-carefully arranged, to suit the solemnity of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>occasion which had called them together. Some
-interested ratepayers occupied the body of the
-hall, and watched the proceedings of the
-"trusted ones" with awe and admiration.</p>
-
-<p>The first business to be transacted was the
-appointment of a chairman. Two councillors
-were proposed for the office, and there were
-four votes for each. Here was a dilemma&mdash;a
-deadlock. What was to be done? A gruff
-voice from among the audience was heard to
-exclaim, "Toss up for it!" a proposition rightly
-met by a volley of indignant and withering
-looks from the councillors.</p>
-
-<p>After a short pause, a remarkably solemn
-looking councillor moved that the "County
-Council Act" be consulted, with a view to finding
-a way out of the difficulty. This motion
-being duly carried, the County's Act was
-produced, and a clause eventually discovered
-bearing on the matter, and which stated that
-lots were to be drawn by some totally disinterested
-individual. It was naturally felt that
-it would be extremely undignified on the part
-of a councillor to go and hunt up a suitable
-party. Still somebody must undertake the duty&mdash;the
-two embryo chairmen and their supporters
-could not sit staring blankly at one another all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>day&mdash;the county work would never be got
-through in that fashion, nor the county roads
-ever graded and metalled. At this crisis a
-gentleman among the audience&mdash;all honour to
-him&mdash;volunteered to find an eligible person, and
-on his offer being graciously accepted, rushed
-from the hall. He first encountered a workman
-halfway up a ladder, standing against a building
-in course of erection, and called out to him
-to come and draw lots for the chairmanship of
-the county. The man on the ladder, owing
-probably to the hammering that was going on,
-evidently only imperfectly heard, for instead of
-replying, he hailed his mate on the roof with a
-"Hi, Bill! here is a go. They wants me to go
-and be chairman of the county." Bill leant
-over the parapet, and delivered himself as
-follows&mdash;"You take my tip, Jack, and have
-nothing to do with 'em!" and this advice
-Jack concluded to follow, and refused to be
-beguiled from his ladder. Nothing daunted,
-however, the public-spirited volunteer proceeded
-with his search, and after a considerable lapse
-of time, returned with a small boy in charge,
-whom he triumphantly marched up the hall,
-amid murmurs of applause.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the only "bell-topper" to be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>found among the head-gear of the assembled
-sages had been called into requisition, placed
-in position on the table, and the names of the
-proposed chairmen written on pieces of paper
-and laid in it.</p>
-
-<p>The boy was now commanded to approach
-the hat and draw. At this supreme moment
-the scene was most impressive. Round about,
-in various attitudes, betokening the deep interest
-they felt in the proceedings, were the eight
-councillors, and on tiptoes in front of the table
-was the small boy, endeavouring amid profound
-silence to fathom the depths of the bell-topper.
-Never before had that small boy in the course of
-his brief life been such an object of interest
-outside his own family. The eyes of the leading
-men in the county were on him, and the
-election of chairman of the County Council was
-in his hands. It ought to have been a proud
-moment for that lad, but I regret to record he
-hardly seemed duly impressed.</p>
-
-<p>At last his not too nimble fingers secured one
-of the pieces of paper, the boy became once
-more an insignificant atom of humanity in
-flour-bag pants, and the selected chairman was
-duly announced. He assumed the position
-with a calm dignity and solemnity, which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>seemed to proclaim him as not being unaccustomed
-to such honours, and the County
-Council proceeded to business.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_210.jpg" alt="" width="481" height="500" />
-<p class="caption center p90">The Supreme Moment.<a name="FNanchor_A_2" id="FNanchor_A_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_2" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_2" id="Footnote_A_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_2"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> In order to avoid the possibility of giving offence, I have taken
-care not to caricature any actual members of the Council.</p></div>
-
-<p>The practical working of this system is not at
-present very satisfactory, and the last half-yearly
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>statement of accounts shows that the roads of
-the district were not so economically managed
-as when they were under the former Road
-Boards, which did not involve the keeping up
-of this august body, the County Council.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><em>CONCLUSION.</em></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smcap">At</span> the commencement of this narrative, I expressed
-my opinion that persons fond of outdoor
-amusements, and with moderate incomes, would
-get on very well in New Zealand. Four or five
-hundred a year is thought little of at home,
-but a gentleman out here with such an income,
-would be deemed a man of very considerable
-importance, and if he felt an inclination for
-politics, would have little difficulty in securing
-a seat in the House of Representatives.</p>
-
-<p>These are the kind of men the colony wants&mdash;men
-who would take up politics for the good of
-their adopted country, and not for the sake of
-an honorarium which the country cannot afford
-to pay.</p>
-
-<p>New Zealand has now passed the pioneer
-stage, and, like a newly built and furnished
-hotel, is prepared to receive any amount of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>visitors, but they must bring their cheque books
-with them. She has all the necessaries of
-ordinary civilised life, plenty of labour, cities lit
-with gas and the electric light, churches, houses
-furnished with bath-rooms and hot and cold
-water pipes, clubs, hotels, railways, telephones,
-roads, carriages, tramways, steamships, yachts,
-billiard rooms, and her big dock in Auckland,
-which Mr. Froude laughs at in "Oceana."</p>
-
-<p>Now I cannot resist saying a word or two
-about this part of his book.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Froude seems annoyed with the citizens
-of Auckland for the improvements they are
-carrying out, particularly with the dock, and
-predicts that New Zealand will never grow into
-a new nation thus.</p>
-
-<p>I don't for a moment presume to dispute Mr.
-Froude's judgment with regard to the baneful
-effect likely to be produced by a big dock on a
-young colony; it is a subject I have never
-studied, and I have no intention of pitting my
-opinion against his. Still, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">humanum est errare</i>,
-and Mr. Froude, though an historian, is human,
-and in this particular instance, most colonials
-in the province of Auckland think mistaken
-as well, as he certainly is with regard to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>harbour and the dimensions of the dock. Referring
-to them, he says: "Public works form
-the excuse for the borrowing, and there are works
-enough and to spare in progress. They are laying
-out a harbour, cutting down half a hillside
-in the process, suited for the ambitious Auckland
-that is to be, but ten times larger than
-there is present need of. They are excavating
-the biggest graving dock in the world (the
-<em>Great Eastern</em> would float in it with ease),
-preparing for the fleets, which are to make
-Auckland their headquarters."</p>
-
-<p>I am utterly at a loss to know what Mr.
-Froude means by saying they are laying out a
-harbour, as Auckland harbour has been laid out
-by nature, and man has had no hand in it. A
-part of the foreshore has certainly been reclaimed
-within the last three or four years, and on the
-reclaimed land now stands the Auckland railway
-terminus, the Auckland Freezing Company's
-premises, some large flour mills, an hotel, and
-some other buildings. To fill in this reclamation,
-they utilised a precipitous hill, over-shadowing
-the main road from Parnell to
-Auckland, which was slipping, and in a highly
-dangerous condition; but how can that be called
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>"laying out a harbour"? The hill had to be
-removed, as part actually slipped one morning,
-carried away a building, and fell across
-the road, nearly burying an omnibus and its
-contents.</p>
-
-<p>Does Mr. Froude blame the Harbour Board for
-converting this dangerous hillside into valuable
-building land?</p>
-
-<p>With regard to dimensions, the new Auckland
-dock, "The Calliope" (which Mr. Froude calls
-the biggest in the world), is 500 feet long.
-There are two docks, I believe, at Birkenhead,
-each 750 feet long; two at Plymouth, each
-644 feet long; one now in course of construction
-in Sydney, N.S.W., 630 feet long; one at
-Carleton, N.B., 630 feet long; and one at
-Liverpool, 501 feet long. The <em>Great Eastern</em>
-steamship is one of the two vessels afloat that
-will <em>not fit</em> in the Calliope dock.</p>
-
-<p>So much for Mr. Froude's facts about the
-dimensions of the dock. Now a word about
-the wisdom of having made it.</p>
-
-<p>Auckland harbour is, without question, one of the best natural
-harbours in the universe. Its depth is so great that ships can
-enter at any state of the tide. A channel a mile wide, and <span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>so
-perfectly clear of obstacles that the services of the pilot are often
-dispensed with, leads to its entrance, which is snugly sheltered by
-outlying islands. Its coaling facilities are magnificent, the supply
-of coal inexhaustible, and its position with regard to the groups of
-islands forming the eastern portion of the continent of Australasia,
-must render it, I should think, a desirable point for a naval station.
-All it required to make it perfect was a dock of sufficient dimensions
-to take in any of Her Majesty's ships of war, and hence the big dock.
-If Auckland is ever utilised as a naval station, immense benefit must
-accrue to the town. A man of war or two, with six or seven hundred
-hands apiece, means a good many hundred pounds' worth of business a
-week to the tradesmen of Auckland. But Mr. Froude says this sort of
-thing will never make New Zealand a nation. He thinks the people should
-go and live in the country, raise crops, breed sheep and cattle, and
-not bother about towns and big docks. Surely he forgets that the farmer
-must have a market, and that his prosperity depends on the demand
-for his produce, and therefore in a great measure on the prosperity
-of the towns.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217"
-id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p> <p>A few more words, and I will
-have said my say. I trust the reader will pardon all my shortcomings,
-and will bear in mind that I have only endeavoured to describe my own
-experiences in the colony, my own impression concerning matters that
-have come under my notice, and some opinions I have gathered from
-old colonials. I know nothing of agricultural pursuits, but believe
-that the kind of farming most suitable to this part of the colony is
-sheep-farming, my principal reasons for so thinking being that many of
-the Kaiparians appear to do well at it, and that a Matakohe resident,
-our local J.P., carries off nearly every year two or three prizes for
-sheep at the Annual Show held in Auckland, and last year the first
-prize for Shropshires. Grapes do splendidly in this district, and I
-think wine-making will one day become a leading industry. The olive
-also grows remarkably well, and I fancy I see another industry sticking
-out in that direction. Our mineral resources have never been tapped,
-hough there are many indications of hidden wealth.</p>
-
-<p>The colony is undoubtedly passing through
-a period of depression (in which it is by no
-means singular), and is suffering as well from
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>too much government, both local and general.
-It however still possesses plenty of vitality, and
-only wants time, and men earnest for its good,
-at the head of affairs, to nurse it into a vigorous
-and flourishing condition.</p>
-
-<p>At the present, indeed, it offers little inducement
-to professional men, to endeavour to pursue
-their callings, but what better time, when land
-is so cheap, could be selected by gentlemen
-with small fixed incomes to come out, and
-purchase properties. I should strongly advise
-family men to bring if possible their own
-servants with them, and to get an agreement
-signed immediately on reaching Auckland,
-binding them, on consideration of the passage
-money, to remain a certain time in their service
-at certain wages. I cannot help thinking that
-there are many at home with moderate incomes
-who would do far better out here, and who could
-become important personages in New Zealand
-if they chose to take up public matters. They
-must, however, as I mentioned before, be people
-who like a free and easy life, untrammelled by
-stiff rules of society. The climate of the North
-Island is said to be all that can be desired for
-those whom a tropical life has unsuited to
-endure the harsh winds, the fogs, and the cold
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>of England; and although I have not travelled
-the colony sufficiently to feel competent to pass
-an opinion as to which are the most desirable
-localities, still I do not think I can be wrong
-in mentioning as a summer or autumn retreat
-the Northern Kaipara.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">THE END.</p>
-
-<p class="space-above4"></p>
-
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p class="center p60">PRINTED BY BALLANTYNE, HANSON AND CO.<br />
-EDINBURGH AND LONDON.</p>
-
-
-<p class="space-above2"></p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
- <h2 id="end_note" class="nopagebreak" title="">Transcriber's Notes</h2>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_19" title="">Page 19</a>: <a href="#Page_20" title="">Page 20</a>: <a href="#Page_29" title="">Page 29</a>: changed, Manakan to Manukau</p>
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- <a href="#Page_140" title="">Page 140</a>: <a href="#Page_197" title="">Page 197</a>:changed, Nikan to Nikau</p>
-<p><a href="#Page_112" title="">Page 112</a>: changed, lessons to lessens</p>
-
-</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK KAIPARA, OR EXPERIENCES OF A SETTLER IN NORTH NEW ZEALAND ***</div>
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