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<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND </h1>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h2> By Lady Barker. </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> 1883 </h3>
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<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_PREF"> Preface. </SPAN> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002">
Letter I. </SPAN> Two months at sea—Melbourne <br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> Letter II. </SPAN> Sight-seeing in
Melbourne <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> Letter III. </SPAN> On
to New Zealand <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> Letter IV. </SPAN> First
introduction to "Station life" <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006">
Letter V. </SPAN> A pastoral letter <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> Letter VI. </SPAN> Society—houses
and servants <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> Letter VII. </SPAN> A
young colonist—the town and its neighbourhood <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> Letter VIII. </SPAN> Pleasant days at
Ilam <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> Letter IX. </SPAN> Death
in our new home—New Zealand children <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> Letter X. </SPAN> Our station home <br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> Letter XI. </SPAN> Housekeeping, and
other matters <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> Letter XII. </SPAN> My
first expedition <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> Letter XIII. </SPAN> Bachelor
hospitality—a gale on shore <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015">
Letter XIV. </SPAN> A Christmas picnic, and other doings <br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> Letter XV. </SPAN> Everyday station
life <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> Letter XVI. </SPAN> A
sailing excursion on Lake Coleridge <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018">
Letter XVII. </SPAN> My first and last experience of "camping
out" <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> Letter XVIII. </SPAN> A
journey "down south" <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> Letter XIX.</SPAN> A Christening gathering—the fate of Dick <br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> Letter XX. </SPAN> the New Zealand
snowstorm of 1867 <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> Letter XXI. </SPAN> Wild
cattle hunting in the Kowai Bush <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023">
Letter XXII. </SPAN> The exceeding joy of "burning" <br/><br/>
<SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> Letter XXIII. </SPAN> Concerning a
great flood <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> Letter XXIV. </SPAN> My
only fall from horseback <br/><br/> <SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> Letter
XXV. </SPAN> How We lost our horses and had to walk home <br/><br/></p>
</blockquote>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Preface. </h2>
<p>These letters, their writer is aware, justly incur the reproach of egotism
and triviality; at the same time she did not see how this was to be
avoided, without lessening their value as the exact account of a lady's
experience of the brighter and less practical side of colonization. They
are published as no guide or handbook for "the intending emigrant;" that
person has already a literature to himself, and will scarcely find here so
much as a single statistic. They simply record the expeditions,
adventures, and emergencies diversifying the daily life of the wife of a
New Zealand sheep-farmer; and, as each was written while the novelty and
excitement of the scenes it describes were fresh upon her, they may
succeed in giving here in England an adequate impression of the delight
and freedom of an existence so far removed from our own highly-wrought
civilization: not failing in this, the writer will gladly bear the burden
of any critical rebuke the letters deserve. One thing she hopes will
plainly appear,—that, however hard it was to part, by the width of
the whole earth, from dear friends and spots scarcely less dear, yet she
soon found in that new country new friends and a new home; costing her in
their turn almost as many parting regrets as the old.</p>
<p>F. N. B. <br/> <br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Letter I: Two months at sea—Melbourne. </h2>
<p>Port Phillip Hotel, Melbourne. September 22d, 1865. .... Now I must give
you an account of our voyage: it has been a very quick one for the immense
distance traversed, sometimes under canvas, but generally steaming. We saw
no land between the Lizard and Cape Otway light—that is, for
fifty-seven days: and oh, the monotony of that time!—the monotony of
it! Our decks were so crowded that we divided our walking hours, in order
that each set of passengers might have space to move about; for if every
one had taken it into their heads to exercise themselves at the same time,
we could hardly have exceeded the fisherman's definition of a walk, "two
steps and overboard." I am ashamed to say I was more or less ill all the
way, but, fortunately, F—— was not, and I rejoiced at this
from the most selfish motives, as he was able to take care of me. I find
that sea-sickness develops the worst part of one's character with
startling rapidity, and, as far as I am concerned, I look back with
self-abasement upon my callous indifference to the sufferings of others,
and apathetic absorption in my individual misery.</p>
<p>Until we had fairly embarked, the well-meaning but ignorant among our
friends constantly assured us, with an air of conviction as to the truth
and wisdom of their words, that we were going at the very best season of
the year; but as soon as we could gather the opinions of those in
authority on board, it gradually leaked out that we really had fallen upon
quite a wrong time for such a voyage, for we very soon found ourselves in
the tropics during their hottest month (early in August), and after having
been nearly roasted for three weeks, we plunged abruptly into mid-winter,
or at all events very early spring, off the Cape of Good Hope, and went
through a season of bitterly cold weather, with three heavy gales. I
pitied the poor sailors from the bottom of my heart, at their work all
night on decks slippery with ice, and pulling at ropes so frozen that it
was almost impossible to bend them; but, thank God, there were no
casualties among the men. The last gale was the most severe; they said it
was the tail of a cyclone. One is apt on land to regard such phrases as
the "shriek of the storm," or "the roar of the waves," as poetical
hyperboles; whereas they are very literal and expressive renderings of the
sounds of horror incessant throughout a gale at sea. Our cabin, though
very nice and comfortable in other respects, possessed an extraordinary
attraction for any stray wave which might be wandering about the saloon:
once or twice I have been in the cuddy when a sea found its way down the
companion, and I have watched with horrible anxiety a ton or so of water
hesitating which cabin it should enter and deluge, and it always seemed to
choose ours. All these miseries appear now, after even a few days of the
blessed land, to belong to a distant past; but I feel inclined to lay my
pen down and have a hearty laugh at the recollection of one cold night,
when a heavy "thud" burst open our cabin door, and washed out all the
stray parcels, boots, etc., from the corners in which the rolling of the
ship had previously bestowed them. I was high and dry in the top berth,
but poor F—— in the lower recess was awakened by the douche,
and no words of mine can convey to you the utter absurdity of his
appearance, as he nimbly mounted on the top of a chest of drawers close
by, and crouched there, wet and shivering, handing me up a most
miscellaneous assortment of goods to take care of in my little dry nest.</p>
<p>Some of our fellow-passengers were very good-natured, and devoted
themselves to cheering and enlivening us by getting up concerts, little
burlesques and other amusements; and very grateful we were for their
efforts: they say that "anything is fun in the country," but on board ship
a little wit goes a very long way indeed, for all are only too ready and
anxious to be amused. The whole dramatic strength of the company was
called into force for the performance of "The Rivals," which was given a
week or so before the end of the voyage. It went off wonderfully well; but
I confess I enjoyed the preparations more than the play itself: the
ingenuity displayed was very amusing at the time. You on shore cannot
imagine how difficult it was to find a snuff-box for "Sir Anthony
Absolute," or with what joy and admiration we welcomed a clever substitute
for it in the shape of a match-box covered with the lead out of a
tea-chest most ingeniously modelled into an embossed wreath round the lid,
with a bunch of leaves and buds in the centre, the whole being brightly
burnished: at the performance the effect of this little "property" was
really excellent. Then, at the last moment, poor "Bob Acres" had to give
in, and acknowledge that he could not speak for coughing; he had been
suffering from bronchitis for some days past, but had gallantly striven to
make himself heard at rehearsals; so on the day of the play F——
had the part forced on him. There was no time to learn his "words," so he
wrote out all of them in large letters on slips of paper and fastened them
on the beams. This device was invisible to the audience, but he was
obliged to go through his scenes with his head as high up as if he had on
a martingale; however, we were all so indulgent that at any little <i>contretemps</i>,
such as one of the actresses forgetting her part or being seized by
stage-fright, the applause was much greater than when things went
smoothly.</p>
<p>I can hardly believe that it is only two days since we steamed into
Hobson's Bay, on a lovely bright spring morning. At dinner, the evening
before, our dear old captain had said that we should see the revolving
light on the nearest headland about eight o'clock that evening, and so we
did. You will not think me childish, if I acknowledge that my eyes were so
full of tears I could hardly see it after the first glimpse; it is
impossible to express in a letter all the joy and thankfulness of such a
moment. Feelings like these are forgotten only too quickly in the jar and
bustle of daily life, and we are always ready to take as a matter of
course those mercies which are new every morning; but when I realized that
all the tosses and tumbles of so many weary days and nights were over, and
that at last we had reached the haven where we would be, my first thought
was one of deep gratitude. It was easy to see that it was a good moment
with everyone; squabbles were made up with surprising quickness; shy
people grew suddenly sociable; some who had comfortable homes to go to on
landing gave kind and welcome invitations to others, who felt themselves
sadly strange in a new country; and it was with really a lingering feeling
of regret that we all separated at last, though a very short time before
we should have thought it quite impossible to be anything but delighted to
leave the ship.</p>
<p>We have not seen much of Melbourne yet, as there has been a great deal to
do in looking after the luggage, and at first one is capable of nothing
but a delightful idleness. The keenest enjoyment is a fresh-water bath,
and next to that is the new and agreeable luxury of the ample space for
dressing; and then it is so pleasant to suffer no anxiety as to the
brushes and combs tumbling about. I should think that even the vainest
woman in the world would find her toilet and its duties a daily trouble
and a sorrow at sea, on account of the unsteadiness of all things. The
next delight is standing at the window, and seeing horses, and trees, and
dogs—in fact, all the "treasures of the land;" as for flowers—beautiful
as they are at all times—you cannot learn to appreciate them enough
until you have been deprived of them for two months.</p>
<p>You know that I have travelled a good deal in various parts of the world,
but I have never seen anything at all like Melbourne. In other countries,
it is generally the antiquity of the cities, and their historical
reminiscences, which appeal to the imagination; but <i>here</i>, the
interest is as great from exactly the opposite cause. It is most wonderful
to walk through a splendid town, with magnificent public buildings,
churches, shops, clubs, theatres, with the streets well paved and lighted,
and to think that less than forty years ago it was a desolate swamp
without even a hut upon it. How little an English country town progresses
in forty years, and here is a splendid city created in that time! I have
no hesitation in saying, that any fashionable novelty which comes out in
either London or Paris finds its way to Melbourne by the next steamer; for
instance, I broke my parasol on board ship, and the first thing I did on
landing was to go to one of the best shops in Collins Street to replace
it. On learning what I wanted, the shopman showed me some of those new
parasols which had just come out in London before I sailed, and which I
had vainly tried to procure in S——, only four hours from
London.</p>
<p>The only public place we have yet visited is the Acclimatization Garden;
which is very beautifully laid out, and full of aviaries, though it looks
strange to see common English birds treated as distinguished visitors and
sumptuously lodged and cared for. Naturally, the Australian ones interest
me most, and they are certainly prettier than yours at home, though they
do not sing. I have been already to a shop where they sell skins of birds,
and have half ruined myself in purchases for hats. You are to have a
"diamond sparrow," a dear little fellow with reddish brown plumage, and
white spots over its body (in this respect a miniature copy of the Argus
pheasant I brought from India), and a triangular patch of bright yellow
under its throat. I saw some of them alive in a cage in the market with
many other kinds of small birds, and several pairs of those pretty grass
or zebra paroquets, which are called here by the very inharmonious name of
"budgerighars." I admired the blue wren so much—a tiny <i>birdeen</i>
with tail and body of dust-coloured feathers, and head and throat of a
most lovely turquoise blue; it has also a little wattle of these blue
feathers standing straight out on each side of its head, which gives it a
very pert appearance. Then there is the emu-wren, all sad-coloured, but
quaint, with the tail-feathers sticking up on end, and exactly like those
of an emu; on the very smallest scale, even to the peculiarity of two
feathers growing out of the same little quill. I was much amused by the
varieties of cockatoos, parrots, and lories of every kind and colour,
shrieking and jabbering in the part of the market devoted to them; but I
am told that I have seen very few of the varieties of birds, as it is
early in the spring, and the young ones have not yet been brought in: they
appear to sell as fast as they can be procured. But before I end my letter
I must tell you about the cockatoo belonging to this hotel. It is a famous
bird in its way, having had its portrait taken several times, descriptions
written for newspapers of its talents, and its owner boasts of enormous
sums offered and refused for it. Knowing my fondness for pets, F——
took me downstairs to see it very soon after our arrival. I thought it
hideous: it belongs to a kind not very well known in England, of a
dirtyish white colour, a very ugly-shaped head and bill, and large bluish
rings round the eyes; the beak is huge and curved. If it knew of this last
objection on my part, it would probably answer, like the wolf in Red
Riding Hood's story, "the better to talk with, my dear"—for it is a
weird and knowing bird. At first it flatly refused to show off any of its
accomplishments, but one of the hotel servants good-naturedly came
forward, and Cocky condescended to go through his performances. I cannot
possibly-tell you of all its antics: it pretended to have a violent
toothache, and nursed its beak in its claw, rocking itself backwards and
forwards as if in the greatest agony, and in answer to all the remedies
which were proposed, croaking out, "Oh, it ain't a bit of good," and
finally sidling up, to the edge of its perch, and saying in hoarse but
confidential whisper, "Give us a drop of whisky, <i>do</i>." Its voice was
extraordinarily distinct, and when it sang several snatches of songs the
words were capitally given, with the most absurdly comic intonation, all
the <i>roulades</i> being executed in perfect tune. I liked its sewing
performance so much—to see it hold a little piece of stuff
underneath the claw which rested on the perch, and pretend to sew with the
other, getting into difficulties with its thread, and finally setting up a
loud song in praise of sewing-machines just as if it were an
advertisement.</p>
<p>By the next time I write I shall have seen more of Melbourne; there will,
however, be no time for another letter by this mail; but I will leave one
to be posted after we sail for New Zealand.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter II: Sight-seeing in Melbourne. </h2>
<p>Melbourne, October 1st, 1865. I have left my letter to the last moment
before starting for Lyttleton; everything is re-packed and ready, and we
sail to-morrow morning in the <i>Albion</i>. She is a mail-steamer—very
small after our large vessel, but she looks clean and tidy; at all events,
we hope to be only on board her for ten days. In England one fancies that
New Zealand is quite close to Australia, so I was rather disgusted to find
we had another thousand miles of steaming to do before we could reach our
new home; and one of the many Job's comforters who are scattered up and
down the world assures me that the navigation is the most dangerous and
difficult of the whole voyage.</p>
<p>We have seen a good deal of Melbourne this week; and not only of the town,
for we have had many drives in the exceedingly pretty suburbs, owing to
the kindness of the D——s, who have been most hospitable and
made our visit here delightful. We drove out to their house at Toorak
three or four times; and spent a long afternoon with them; and there I
began to make acquaintance with the Antipodean trees and flowers. I hope
you will not think it a very sweeping assertion if I say that all the
leaves look as if they were made of leather, but it really is so; the hot
winds appear to parch up everything, at all events, round Melbourne, till
the greatest charm of foliage is more or less lost; the flowers also look
withered and burnt up, as yours do at the end of a long, dry summer, only
they assume this appearance after the first hot wind in spring. The suburb
called Heidelberg is the prettiest, to my taste—an undulating
country with vineyards, and a park-like appearance which, is very
charming. All round Melbourne there are nice, comfortable, English-looking
villas. At one of these we called to return a visit and found a very
handsome house, luxuriously furnished, with beautiful garden and grounds.
One afternoon we went by rail to St. Kilda's, a flourishing bathing-place
on the sea-coast, about six miles from Melbourne. Everywhere building is
going on with great rapidity, and you do not see any poor people in the
streets. If I wanted to be critical and find fault, I might object to the
deep gutters on each side of the road; after a shower of rain they are
raging torrents for a short time, through which you are obliged to splash
without regard to the muddy consequences; and even when they are dry, they
entail sudden and prodigious jolts. There are plenty of Hansoms and all
sorts of other conveyances, but I gave F—— no peace until he
took me for a drive in a vehicle which was quite new to me—a sort of
light car with a canopy and curtains, holding four, two on each seat, <i>dos-a-dos</i>,
and called a "jingle,"—of American parentage, I fancy. One drive in
this carriage was quite enough, however, and I contented myself with
Hansoms afterwards; but walking is really more enjoyable than anything
else, after having been so long cooped up on board ship.</p>
<p>We admired the fine statue, at the top of Collins Street, to the memory of
the two most famous of Australian explorers, Burke and Wills, and made
many visits to the Museum, and the glorious Free Library; we also went all
over the Houses of Legislature—very new and grand. But you must not
despise me if I confess to having enjoyed the shops exceedingly: it was so
unlike a jeweller's shop in England to see on the counter gold in its raw
state, in nuggets and dust and flakes; in this stage of its existence it
certainly deserves its name of "filthy lucre," for it is often only half
washed. There were quantities of emus' eggs in the silversmiths' shops,
mounted in every conceivable way as cups and vases, and even as
work-boxes: some designs consisted of three or five eggs grouped together
as a centre-piece. I cannot honestly say I admired any of them; they were
generally too elaborate, comprising often a native (spear in hand), a
kangaroo, palms, ferns, cockatoos, and sometimes an emu or two in
addition, as a pedestal—all this in frosted silver or gold. I was
given a pair of these eggs before leaving England: they were mounted in
London as little flower-vases in a setting consisting only of a few
bulrushes and leaves, yet far better than any of these florid designs; but
he emu-eggs are very popular in Sydney or Melbourne, and I am told sell
rapidly to people going home, who take them as a memento of their
Australian life, and probably think that the greater the number of
reminiscences suggested by the ornament the more satisfactory it is as a
purchase.</p>
<p>I must finish my letter by a description of a dinner-party which about a
dozen of our fellow-passengers joined with us in giving our dear old
captain before we all separated. Whilst we were on board, it very often
happened that the food was not very choice or good: at all events we used
sometimes to grumble at it, and we generally wound up our lamentations by
agreeing that when we reached Melbourne we would have a good dinner
together. Looking back on it, I must say I think we were all rather
greedy, but we tried to give a better colouring to our gourmandism by
inviting the captain, who was universally popular, and by making it as
elegant and pretty a repast as possible. Three or four of the gentlemen
formed themselves into a committee, and they must really have worked very
hard; at all events they collected everything rare and strange in the way
of fish, flesh, and fowl peculiar to Australia, the arrangement of the
table was charming, and the delicacies were all cooked and served to
perfection. The ladies' tastes were considered in the profusion of
flowers, and we each found an exquisite bouquet by our plate. I cannot
possibly give you a minute account of the whole menu; in fact, as it is, I
feel rather like Froissart, who, after chronicling a long list of
sumptuous dishes, is not ashamed to confess, "Of all which good things I,
the chronicler of this narration, did partake!" The soups comprised
kangaroo-tail—a clear soup not unlike ox-tail, but with a flavour of
game. I wish I could recollect the names of the fish: the fresh-water ones
came a long distance by rail from the river Murray, but were excellent
nevertheless. The last thing which I can remember tasting (for one really
could do little else) was a most exquisite morsel of pigeon—more
like a quail than anything else in flavour. I am not a judge of wine, as
you may imagine, therefore it is no unkindness to the owners of the
beautiful vineyards which we saw the other day, to say that I do not like
the Australian wines. Some of the gentlemen pronounced them to be
excellent, especially the equivalent to Sauterne, which has a wonderful
native name impossible to write down; but, as I said before, I do not like
the rather rough flavour. We had not a great variety of fruit at dessert:
indeed, Sydney oranges constituted its main feature, as it is too late for
winter fruits, and too early for summer ones: but we were not inclined to
be over-fastidious, and thought everything delicious.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter III: On to New Zealand. </h2>
<p>Christchurch, Canterbury, N. Z. October 14th, 1865. As you so particularly
desired me when we parted to tell you <i>everything</i>, I must resume my
story where in my last letter I left it off. If I remember rightly, I
ended with an attempt at describing our great feast. We embarked the next
day, and as soon as we were out of the bay the little <i>Albion</i>
plunged into heavy seas. The motion was much worse in her than on board
the large vessel we had been so glad to leave, and all my previous
sufferings seemed insignificant compared with what I endured in my small
and wretchedly hard berth. I have a dim recollection of F——
helping me to dress, wrapping me up in various shawls, and half carrying
me up the companion ladder; I crawled into a sunny corner among the boxes
of oranges with which the deck was crowded, and there I lay helpless and
utterly miserable. One well-meaning and good-natured fellow-passenger
asked F—— if I was fond of birds, and on his saying "Yes,"
went off for a large wicker cage of hideous "laughing Jackasses," which he
was taking as a great treasure to Canterbury. Why they should be called
"Jackasses" I never could discover; but the creatures certainly do utter
by fits and starts a sound which may fairly be described as laughter.
These paroxysms arise from no cause that one can perceive; one bird
begins, and all the others join in, and a more doleful and depressing
chorus I never heard: early in the morning seemed the favourite time for
this discordant mirth. Their owner also possessed a cockatoo with a great
musical reputation, but I never heard it get beyond the first bar of "Come
into the garden, Maud." Ill as I was, I remember being roused to something
like a flicker of animation when I was shown an exceedingly seedy and
shabby-looking blackbird with a broken leg in splints, which its master
(the same bird-fancying gentleman) assured me he had bought in Melbourne
as a great bargain for only 2 pounds 10 shillings!</p>
<p>After five days' steaming we arrived in the open roadstead of Hokitika, on
the west coast of the middle island of New Zealand, and five minutes after
the anchor was down a little tug came alongside to take away our steerage
passengers—three hundred diggers. The gold-fields on this coast were
only discovered eight months ago, and already several canvas towns have
sprung up; there are thirty thousand diggers at work, and every vessel
brings a fresh cargo of stalwart, sun-burnt men. It was rather late, and
getting dark, but still I could distinctly see the picturesque tents in
the deep mountain gorge, their white shapes dotted here and there as far
back from the shore as my sight could follow, and the wreaths of smoke
curling up in all directions from the evening fires: it is still bitterly
cold at night, being very early spring. The river Hokitika washes down
with every fresh such quantities of sand, that a bar is continually
forming in this roadstead, and though only vessels of the least possible
draught are engaged in the coasting-trade, still wrecks are of frequent
occurrence. We ought to have landed our thousands of oranges here, but
this work was necessarily deferred till the morning, for it was as much as
they could do to get all the diggers and their belongings safely ashore
before dark; in the middle of the night one of the sudden and furious
gales common to these seas sprang up, and would soon have driven us on the
rocks if we had not got our steam up quickly and struggled out to sea,
oranges and all, and away to Nelson, on the north coast of the same
island. Here we landed the seventh day after leaving Melbourne, and spent
a few hours wandering about on shore. It is a lovely little town, as I saw
it that spring morning, with hills running down almost to the water's
edge, and small wooden houses with gables and verandahs, half buried in
creepers, built up the sides of the steep slopes. It was a true New
Zealand day, still and bright, a delicious invigorating freshness in the
air, without the least chill, the sky of a more than Italian blue, the
ranges of mountains in the distance covered with snow, and standing out,
sharp and clear against this lovely glowing heaven. The town itself, I
must say, seemed very dull and stagnant, with little sign of life or
activity about it; but nothing can be prettier or more picturesque than
its situation—not unlike that of a Swiss village. Our day came to an
end all too soon, and we re-embarked for Wellington, the most southern
town of the North Island. The seat of government is there, and it is
supposed to be a very thriving place, but is not nearly so well situated
as Nelson nor so attractive to strangers. We landed and walked about a
good deal, and saw what little there was to see. At first I thought the
shops very handsome, but I found, rather to my disgust, that generally the
fine, imposing frontage was all a sham; the actual building was only a
little but at the back, looking all the meaner for the contrast to the
cornices and show windows in front. You cannot think how odd it was to
turn a corner and see that the building was only one board in thickness,
and scarcely more substantial than the scenes at a theatre. We lunched at
the principal hotel, where F—— was much amused at my
astonishment at colonial prices. We had two dozen very nice little
oysters, and he had a glass of porter: for this modest repast we paid
eleven shillings!</p>
<p>We slept on board, had another walk on shore after breakfast the following
morning, and about twelve o'clock set off for Lyttleton, the final end of
our voyaging, which we reached in about twenty hours.</p>
<p>The scenery is very beautiful all along the coast, but the navigation is
both dangerous and difficult. It was exceedingly cold, and Lyttleton did
not look very inviting; we could not get in at all near the landing-place,
and had to pay 2 pounds to be rowed ashore in an open boat with our
luggage. I assure you it was a very "bad quarter of an hour" we passed in
that boat; getting into it was difficult enough. The spray dashed over us
every minute, and by the time we landed we were quite drenched, but a good
fire at the hotel and a capital lunch soon made us all right again;
besides, in the delight of being actually at the end of our voyage no
annoyance or discomfort was worth a moment's thought. F—— had
a couple of hours' work rushing backwards and forwards to the Custom
House, clearing our luggage, and arranging for some sort of conveyance to
take us over the hills. The great tunnel through these "Port Hills" (which
divide Lyttleton from Christchurch, the capital of Canterbury) is only
half finished, but it seems wonderful that so expensive and difficult an
engineering work could be undertaken by such an infant colony.</p>
<p>At last a sort of shabby waggonette was forthcoming, and about three
o'clock we started from Lyttleton, and almost immediately began to ascend
the zig-zag. It was a tremendous pull for the poor horses, who however
never flinched; at the steepest pinch the gentlemen were requested to get
out and walk, which they did, and at length we reached the top. It was
worth all the bad road to look down on the land-locked bay, with the
little patches of cultivation, a few houses nestling in pretty recesses.
The town of Lyttleton seemed much more imposing and important as we rose
above it: fifteen years ago a few sheds received the "Pilgrims," as the
first comers are always called. I like the name; it is so pretty and
suggestive. By the way, I am told that these four ships, sent out with the
pilgrims by the Canterbury Association, sailed together from England,
parted company almost directly, and arrived in Lyttleton (then called Port
Cooper) four months afterwards, on the same day, having all experienced
fine weather, but never having sighted each other once.</p>
<p>As soon as we reached the top of the hill the driver looked to the harness
of his horses, put on a very powerful double break, and we began the
descent, which, I must say, I thought we took much too quickly, especially
as at every turn of the road some little anecdote was forthcoming of an
upset or accident; however, I would not show the least alarm, and we were
soon rattling along the Sumner Road, by the sea-shore, passing every now
and then under tremendous overhanging crags. In half an hour we reached
Sumner itself, where we stopped for a few moments to change horses. There
is an inn and a village here, where people from Christchurch come in the
warm weather for sea-air and bathing. It began to rain hard, and the rest
of the journey, some seven or eight miles, was disagreeable enough; but it
was the <i>end</i>, and that one thought was sufficient to keep us
radiantly good-humoured, in spite of all little trials. When we reached
Christchurch, we drove at once to a sort of boarding-house where we had
engaged apartments, and thought of nothing but supper and bed.</p>
<p>The next day people began calling, and certainly I cannot complain of any
coldness or want of welcome to my new home. I like what I have seen of my
future acquaintances very much. Of course there is a very practical style
and tone over everything, though outwardly the place is as civilized as if
it were a hundred years old; well-paved streets, gas lamps, and even
drinking fountains and pillar post-offices! I often find myself wondering
whether the ladies here are at all like what our great grandmothers were.
I suspect they are, for they appear to possess an amount of useful
practical knowledge which is quite astonishing, and yet know how to
surround themselves, according to their means and opportunities, with the
refinements and elegancies of life. I feel quite ashamed of my own utter
ignorance on every subject, and am determined to set to work directly and
learn: at all events I shall have plenty of instructresses. Christchurch
is a very pretty little town, still primitive enough to be picturesque,
and yet very thriving: capital shops, where everything may be bought;
churches, public buildings, a very handsome club-house, etc. Most of the
houses are of wood, but when they are burned down (which is often the
case) they are now rebuilt of brick or stone, so that the new ones are
nearly all of these more solid materials. I am disappointed to find that,
the cathedral, of which I had heard so much, has not progressed beyond the
foundations, which cost 8,000 pounds: all the works have been stopped, and
certainly there is not much to show for so large a sum, but labour is very
dear. Christchurch is a great deal more lively and bustling than most
English country towns, and I am much struck by the healthy appearance of
the people. There are no paupers to be seen; every one seems well fed and
well clothed; the children are really splendid. Of course, as might be
expected, there is a great deal of independence in bearing and manner,
especially among the servants, and I hear astounding stories concerning
them on all sides. My next letter will be from the country, as we have
accepted an invitation to pay a visit of six weeks or so to a station in
the north of the province.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter IV: First introduction to "Station life." </h2>
<p>Heathstock, Canterbury, November 13th, 1865. I have just had the happiness
of receiving my first budget of English letters; and no one can imagine
how a satisfactory home letter satisfies the hunger of the heart after its
loved and left ones. Your letter was particularly pleasant, because I
could perceive, as I held the paper in my hands, that you were writing as
you really felt, and that you were indeed happy. May you long continue so,
dearest.</p>
<p>F—— says that this beautiful place will give me a very
erroneous impression of station life, and that I shall probably expect to
find its comforts and luxuries the rule, whereas they are the exception;
in the mean time, however, I am enjoying them thoroughly. The house is
only sixty-five miles from Christchurch, nearly due north (which you must
not forget answers to your south in point of warmth). Our kind friends and
hosts, the L——s, called for us in their comfortable and large
break, with four horses. Mr. L—— drove, F—— sat on
the box, and inside were the ladies, children, and a nurse. Our first
stage was to Kaiapoi, a little town on the river Waimakiriri, where we had
a good luncheon of whitebait, and rested and fed the horses. From the
window of the hotel I saw a few groups of Maories; they looked very ugly
and peaceable, with a rude sort of basket made of flax fibres, or buckets
filled with whitebait, which they wanted us to buy. There are some
reserved lands near Kaiapoi where they have a very thriving settlement,
living in perfect peace and good-will with their white neighbours. When we
set off again on our journey, we passed a little school-house for their
children.</p>
<p>We reached Leathfield that evening, only twenty-five miles from
Christchurch; found a nice inn, or accommodation-house, as roadside inns
are called here; had a capital supper and comfortable beds, and were up
and off again at daylight the next morning. As far as the Weka Pass, where
we stopped for dinner, the roads were very good, but after that we got
more among the hills and off the usual track, and there were many sharp
turns and steep pinches; but Mr. L—— is an excellent whip, and
took great care of us. We all got very weary towards the end of this
second day's journey, and the last two hours of it were in heavy rain; it
was growing very dark when we reached the gate, and heard the welcome
sound of gravel under the wheels. I could just perceive that we had
entered a plantation, the first trees since we left Christchurch. Nothing
seems so wonderful to me as the utter treelessness of the vast Canterbury
plains; occasionally you pass a few Ti-ti palms (ordinarily called
cabbage-trees), or a large prickly bush which goes by the name of "wild
Irishman," but for miles and miles you see nothing but flat ground or
slightly undulating downs of yellow tussocks, the tall native grass. It
has the colour and appearance of hay, but serves as shelter for a
delicious undergrowth of short sweet herbage, upon which the sheep live,
and horses also do very well on it, keeping in good working condition,
quite unlike their puffy, fat state on English pasture.</p>
<p>We drove through the plantation and another gate, and drew up at the door
of a very large, handsome, brick house, with projecting gables and a
verandah. The older I grow the more convinced I am that contrast is
everything in this world; and nothing I can write can give you any idea of
the delightful change from the bleak country we had been slowly travelling
through in pouring rain, to the warmth and brightness of this charming
house. There were blazing fires ready to welcome us, and I feel sure you
will sufficiently appreciate this fact when I tell you that by the time
the coal reaches this, it costs nine pounds per ton. It is possible to get
Australian coal at about half the price, but it is not nearly as good.</p>
<p>We were so tired that we were only fit for the lowest phase of human
enjoyment—warmth, food, and sleep; but the next morning was bright
and lovely, and I was up and out in the verandah as early as possible. I
found myself saying constantly, in a sort of ecstasy, "How I wish they
could see this in England!" and not only see but feel it, for the very
breath one draws on such a morning is a happiness; the air is so light and
yet balmy, it seems to heal the lungs as you inhale it. The verandah is
covered with honeysuckles and other creepers, and the gable end of the
house where the bow-window of the drawing-room projects, is one mass of
yellow Banksia roses in full blossom. A stream runs through the grounds,
fringed with weeping willows, which are in their greatest beauty at this
time of year, with their soft, feathery foliage of the tenderest green.
The flower beds are dotted about the lawn, which surrounds the house and
slopes away from it, and they are brilliant patches of colour, gay with
verbenas, geraniums, and petunias. Here and there clumps of tall trees
rise above the shrubs, and as a background there is a thick plantation of
red and blue gums, to shelter the garden from the strong N.W. winds. Then,
in front, the country stretches away in undulating downs to a chain of
high hills in the distance: every now and then there is a deep gap in
these, through which you see magnificent snow-covered mountains.</p>
<p>The inside of the house is as charming as the outside, and the perfection
of comfort; but I am perpetually wondering how all the furniture—especially
the fragile part of it—got here. When I remember the jolts, and
ruts, and roughnesses of the road, I find myself looking at the pier-glass
and glass shades, picture-frames, etc., with a sort of respect, due to
them for having survived so many dangers.</p>
<p>The first two or three days we enjoyed ourselves in a thoroughly lazy
manner; the garden was a never-ending source of delight, and there were
all the animals to make friends with, "mobs" of horses to look at,
rabbits, poultry, and pets of all sorts. About a week after our arrival,
some more gentlemen came, and then we had a series of picnics. As these
are quite unlike your highly civilized entertainments which go by the same
name, I must describe one to you.</p>
<p>The first thing after breakfast was to collect all the provisions, and
pack them in a sort of washing-basket, and then we started in an American
waggon drawn by a pair of stout cobs. We drove for some miles till we came
to the edge of one of the high terraces common to New Zealand scenery:
here we all got out; the gentlemen unharnessed and tethered the horses, so
that they could feed about comfortably, and then we scrambled down the
deep slope, at the bottom of which ran a wide shallow creek. It was no
easy matter to get the basket down here, I assure you; we ladies were only
permitted to load ourselves, one with a little kettle, and the other with
a tea-pot, but this was quite enough, as crossing the creek by a series of
jumps from one wet stone to another is not easy for a beginner.</p>
<p>Mr. L—— brought a large dog with him, a kangaroo-hound (not
unlike a lurcher in appearance), to hunt the wekas. I had heard at night
the peculiar cry or call of these birds, but had not seen one until
to-day. "Fly" put up several, one after another, and soon ran them down.
At first I thought it very cruel to destroy such a tame and apparently
harmless creature, but I am assured that they are most mischievous, and
that it would be useless to turn out the pheasants and partridges which
Mr. L—— has brought from England, until the numbers of the
wekas are considerably reduced. They are very like a hen pheasant without
the long tail feathers, and until you examine them you cannot tell they
have no wings, though there is a sort of small pinion among the feathers,
with a claw at the end of it. They run very swiftly, availing themselves
cleverly of the least bit of cover; but when you hear a short sharp cry,
it is a sign that the poor weka is nearly done, and the next thing you see
is Fly shaking a bundle of brown feathers vehemently. All the dogs are
trained to hunt these birds, as they are a great torment, sucking eggs and
killing chickens; but still I could not help feeling sorry when Fly,
having disposed of the mother, returned to the flax-bush out of which he
had started her, and killed several baby-wekas by successive taps of his
paw.</p>
<p>I have wandered away from my account of the picnic in the most
unjustifiable manner. The gentlemen were toiling up the hill, after we had
crossed the creek, carrying the big basket by turns between them; it was
really hard work, and I must tell you in confidence, that I don't believe
they liked it—at least I can answer for one. I laughed at them for
not enjoying their task, and assured them that I was looking forward with
pleasure to washing up the plates and dishes after our luncheon; but I
found that they had all been obliged, in the early days of the colony, to
work at domestic drudgery in grim and grimy earnest, so it had lost the
charm of novelty which it still possessed for me.</p>
<p>As soon as we reached a pretty sheltered spot half-way up the hill among
some trees and ferns, and by the side of the creek, we unpacked the
basket, and began collecting dry wood for a fire: we soon had a splendid
blaze under the lee of a fine rock, and there we boiled our kettle and our
potatoes. The next thing was to find a deep hole in the creek, so
over-shadowed by rocks and trees that the water would be icy cold: in this
we put the champagne to cool. The result of all our preparations was a
capital luncheon, eaten in a most romantic spot, with a lovely view before
us, and the creek just like a Scotch burn, hurrying and tumbling down the
hill-side to join the broader stream in the valley. After luncheon, the
gentlemen considered themselves entitled to rest, lying lazily back among
the fern and smoking, whilst we ladies sat a little apart and chatted: I
was busy learning to knit. Then, about five, we had the most delicious cup
of tea I ever tasted, and we repacked the basket (it was very light now, I
assure you), and made our way back to the top of the terrace, put the
horses in again, and so home. It was a long, bright, summer holiday, and
we enjoyed it thoroughly. After a voyage, such an expedition as this is
full of delight; every tree and bird is a source of pleasure.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter V: A pastoral letter. </h2>
<p>Heathstock, December 1st, 1865. All I can find to tell you this month is
that I have seen one of the finest and best wool-sheds in the country in
full work. Anything about sheep is as new to you as it is to me, so I
shall begin my story at the very beginning.</p>
<p>I am afraid you will think us a very greedy set of people in this part of
the world, for eating seems to enter so largely into my letters; but the
fact is—and I may as well confess it at once—I am in a chronic
state of hunger; it is the fault of the fine air and the outdoor life: and
then how one sleeps at night! I don't believe you really know in England
what it is to be sleepy as we feel sleepy here; and it is delightful to
wake up in the morning with the sort of joyous light-heartedness which
only young children have. The expedition I am going to relate may fairly
be said to have begun with eating, for although we started for our twelve
miles' drive over the downs immediately after an excellent and somewhat
late breakfast, yet by the time we reached the Home Station we were quite
ready for luncheon. All the work connected with the sheep is carried on
here. The manager has a nice house; and the wool-shed, men's huts, dip,
etc., are near each other. It is the busiest season of the year, and no
time could be spared to prepare for us; we therefore contented ourselves
with what was described to me as ordinary station fare, and I must tell
you what they gave us: first, a tureen of real mutton-broth, not hot water
and chopped parsley, but excel-lent thick soup, with plenty of barley and
meat in it; this had much the same effect on our appetites as the famous
treacle and brimstone before breakfast in "Nicholas Nickleby," so that we
were only able to manage a few little sheeps' tongues, slightly pickled;
and very nice <i>they</i> were; then we finished with a Devonshire junket,
with clotted cream <i>a discretion</i>. Do you think we were much to be
pitied?</p>
<p>After this repast we were obliged to rest a little before we set out for
the wool-shed, which has only been lately finished, and has all the newest
improvements. At first I am "free to confess" that I did not like either
its sounds or sights; the other two ladies turned very pale, but I was
determined to make myself bear it, and after a moment or two I found it
quite possible to proceed with Mr. L——round the "floor." There
were about twenty-five shearers at work, and everything seemed to be very
systematically and well arranged. Each shearer has a trap-door close to
him, out of which he pushes his sheep as soon as the fleece is off, and
there are little pens outside, so that the manager can notice whether the
poor animal has been too much cut with the shears, or badly shorn in any
other respect, and can tell exactly which shearer is to blame. Before this
plan was adopted it was hopeless to try to find out who was the
delinquent, for no one would acknowledge to the least snip. A good shearer
can take off 120 fleeces in a day, but the average is about 80 to each
man. They get one pound per hundred, and are found in everything, having
as much tea and sugar, bread and mutton, as they can consume, and a cook
entirely to themselves; they work at least fourteen hours out of the
twenty-four, and with such a large flock as this—about 50,000—must
make a good deal.</p>
<p>We next inspected the wool tables, to which two boys were incessantly
bringing armfuls of rolled-up fleeces; these were laid on the tables
before the wool-sorters, who opened them out, and pronounced in a moment
to which <i>bin</i> they belonged; two or three men standing behind rolled
them up again rapidly, and put them on a sort of shelf divided into
compartments, which were each labelled, so that the quality and kind of
wool could be told at a glance. There was a constant emptying of these
bins into trucks to be carried off to the press, where we followed to see
the bales packed. The fleeces are tumbled in, and a heavy screw-press
forces them down till the bale—which is kept open in a large square
frame—is as full as it can hold. The top of canvas is then put on,
tightly sewn, four iron pins are removed and the sides of the frame fall
away, disclosing a most symmetrical bale ready to be hoisted by a crane
into the loft above, where it has the brand of the sheep painted on it,
its weight, and to what class the wool belongs. Of course everything has
to be done with great speed and system.</p>
<p>I was much impressed by the silence in the shed; not a sound was to be
heard except the click of the shears, and the wool-sorter's decision as he
flings the fleece behind him, given in one, or at most two words. I was
reminded how touchingly true is that phrase, "Like as a sheep before her
shearers is dumb." All the noise is <i>outside</i>; there the hubbub, and
dust, and apparent confusion are great,—a constant succession of
woolly sheep being brought up to fill the "skillions" (from whence the
shearers take them as they want them), and the newly-shorn ones, white,
clean, and bewildered-looking, being turned out after they have passed
through a narrow passage, called a "race," where each sheep is branded,
and has its mouth examined in order to tell its age, which is marked in a
book. It was a comfort to think all their troubles were over, for a year.
You can hear nothing but barking and bleating, and this goes on from early
morning till dark. We peeped in at the men's huts—a long, low wooden
building, with two rows of "bunks" (berths, I should call their) in one
compartment, and a table with forms round it in the other, and piles of
tin plates and pannikins all about. The kitchen was near, and we were just
in time to see an enormous batch of bread withdrawn from a huge brick
oven: the other commissariat arrangements were on the same scale. Cold tea
is supplied all day long to the shearers, and they appear to consume great
quantities of it.</p>
<p>Our last visit was to the Dip, and it was only a short one, for it seemed
a cruel process; unfortunately, this fine station is in technical parlance
"scabby," and although of course great precautions are taken, still some
10,000 sheep had an ominous large S on them. These poor sufferers are
dragged down a plank into a great pit filled with hot water, tobacco, and
sulphur, and soused over head and ears two or three times. This torture is
repeated more than once.</p>
<p>I was very glad to get away from the Dip, and back to the manager's house,
where we refreshed ourselves by a delicious cup of tea, and soon after
started for a nice long drive home in the cool, clear evening air. The
days are very hot, but never oppressive; and the mornings and evenings are
deliciously fresh and invigorating. You can remain out late without the
least danger. Malaria is unknown, and, in spite of the heavy rains, there
is no such thing as damp. Our way lay through very pretty country—a
series of terraces, with a range of mountains before us, with beautiful
changing and softening evening tints creeping over the whole.</p>
<p>I am sorry to say, we leave this next week. I should like to explore a
great deal more.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter VI: Society.—houses and servants. </h2>
<p>Christchurch, January 1866. I am beginning to get tired of Christchurch
already: but the truth is, I am not in a fair position to judge of it as a
place of residence; for, living temporarily, as we do, in a sort of
boarding-house, I miss the usual duties and occupations of home, and the
town itself has no place of public amusement except a little theatre, to
which it is much too hot to go. The last two weeks have been <i>the</i>
gay ones of the whole year; the races have been going on for three days,
and there have been a few balls; but as a general rule, the society may be
said to be extremely stagnant. No dinner-parties are ever given—I
imagine, on account of the smallness of the houses and the inefficiency of
the servants; but every now and then there is an assembly ball arranged,
in the same way, I believe, as at watering-places in England only, of
course, on a much smaller scale. I have been at two or three of these, and
noticed at each a most undue preponderance of black coats. Nearly all the
ladies were married, there were very few young girls; and it would be a
great improvement to the Christchurch parties if some of the pretty and
partnerless groups of a London ball-room, in all their freshness of
toilette, could be transferred to them. What a sensation they would make,
and what terrible heart-aches among the young gentlemen would be the
result of such an importation! There were the same knots of men standing
together as at a London party, but I must say that, except so far as their
tailor is concerned, I think we have the advantage of you, for the
gentlemen lead such healthy lives that they all look more or less bronzed
and stalwart—in splendid condition, not like your pale dwellers in
cities; and then they come to a ball to dance, arriving early so as to
secure good partners, and their great ambition appears to be to dance
every dance from the first to the last. This makes it hard work for the
few ladies, who are not allowed to sit down for a moment, and I have often
seen a young and pretty partner obliged to divide her dances between two
gentlemen.</p>
<p>Although it tells only against myself, I must make you laugh at an account
of a snub I received at one of these balls. Early in the evening I had
danced with a young gentleman whose station was a long way "up country,"
and who worked so hard on it that he very seldom found time for even the
mild dissipations of Christchurch; he was good-looking and gentlemanly,
and seemed clever and sensible, a little <i>brusque</i>, perhaps, but one
soon gets used to that here. During our quadrille he confided to me that
he hardly knew any ladies in the room, and that his prospects of getting
any dancing were in consequence very blank. I did all I could to find
partners for him, introducing him to every lady whom I knew, but it was in
vain; they would have been delighted to dance with him, but their cards
were filled. At the end of the evening, when I was feeling thoroughly done
up, and could hardly stand up for fatigue, my poor friend came up and
begged for another dance. I assured him I could scarcely stand, but when
he said in a <i>larmoyante</i> voice, "I have only danced once this
evening, that quadrille with you," my heart softened, and I thought I
would make a great effort and try to get through one more set of Lancers;
my partner seemed so grateful, that the demon of vanity, or coquetry, or
whatever it is that prompts one to say absurd things induced me to fish
for a compliment, and to observe, "It was not worth while taking all the
trouble of riding such a distance to dance only with me, was it?"
Whereupon my poor, doleful friend answered, with a deep sigh, and an
accent of profound conviction, "No, indeed it was <i>not</i>!" I leave you
to imagine my discomfiture; but luckily he never observed it, and I felt
all the time that I richly deserved what I got, for asking such a stupid
question.</p>
<p>The music at these balls is very bad, and though the principal room in
which they are given, at the Town Hall, is large and handsome, it is
poorly lighted, and the decorations are desolate in the extreme. I am
afraid this is not a very inviting picture of what is almost our only
opportunity of meeting together, but it is tolerably correct. Visiting
appears to be the business of some people's lives, but the acquaintance
does not seem to progress beyond incessant afternoon calls; we are never
asked inside a house, nor, as far as I can make out, is there any private
society whatever, and the public society consists, as I have said, of a
ball every now and then.</p>
<p>My greatest interest and occupation consist in going to look at my house,
which is being cut out in Christchurch, and will be drayed to our station
next month, a journey of fifty miles. It is, of course, only of wood, and
seems about as solid as a band-box; but I am assured by the builder that
it will be a "most superior article" when it is all put together. F——
and I made the little plan of it ourselves, regulating the size of the
drawing-room by the dimensions of the carpet we brought out, and I
petitioned for a little bay-window, which is to be added; so on my last
visit to his timber-yard, the builder said, with an air of great dignity,
"Would you wish to see the <i>h</i>oriel, mum?" The doors all come
ready-made from America, and most of the wood used in building is the
Kauri pine from the North Island. One advantage, at all events, in having
wooden houses is the extreme rapidity with which they are run up, and
there are no plastered walls to need drying. For a long time we were very
uncertain where, and what, we should build on our station; but only six
weeks after we made up our minds, a house is almost ready for us. The
boards are sawn into the requisite lengths by machinery; and all the
carpentering done down here; the frame will only require to be fitted
together when it reaches its destination, and it is a very good time of
year for building, as the wool drays are all going back empty, and we can
get them to take the loads at reduced prices; but even with this help, it
is enormously expensive to move a small house fifty miles, the last
fifteen over bad roads; it is collar-work for the poor horses all the way,
Christchurch being only nine feet above the sea-level, while our future
home in the Malvern Hills is twelve hundred.</p>
<p>You know we brought all our furniture out with us, and even papers for the
rooms, just because we happened to have everything; but I should not
recommend any one to do so, for the expense of carriage, though moderate
enough by sea (in a wool ship), is enormous as soon as it reaches
Lyttleton, and goods have to be dragged up country by horses or bullocks.
There are very good shops where you can buy everything, and besides these
there are constant sales by auction where, I am told, furniture fetches a
price sometimes under its English value. House rent about Christchurch is
very high. We looked at some small houses in and about the suburbs of the
town, when we were undecided about our plans, and were offered the most
inconvenient little dwellings, with rooms which were scarcely bigger than
cupboards, for 200 pounds a year; we saw nothing at a lower price than
this, and any house of a better class, standing in a nicely arranged
shrubbery, is at least 300 pounds per annum. Cab-hire is another thing
which seems to me disproportionately dear, as horses are very cheap; there
are no small fares, half-a-crown being the lowest "legal tender" to a
cabman; and I soon gave up returning visits when I found that to make a
call in a Hansom three or four miles out of the little town cost one pound
or one pound ten shillings, even remaining only a few minutes at the
house.</p>
<p>All food (except mutton) appears to be as nearly as possible at London
prices; but yet every one looks perfectly well-fed, and actual want is
unknown. Wages of all sorts are high, and employment, a certainty. The
look and bearing of the immigrants appear to alter soon after they reach
the colony. Some people object to the independence of their manner, but I
do not; on the contrary, I like to see the upright gait, the well-fed,
healthy look, the decent clothes (even if no one touches his hat to you),
instead of the half-starved, depressed appearance, and too often cringing
servility of the mass of our English population. Scotchmen do particularly
well out here; frugal and thrifty, hard-working and sober, it is easy to
predict the future of a man of this type in a new country. Naturally, the
whole tone of thought and feeling is almost exclusively practical; even in
a morning visit there is no small-talk. I find no difficulty in obtaining
the useful information upon domestic subjects which I so much need; for it
is sad to discover, after all my house-keeping experience, that I am still
perfectly ignorant. Here it is necessary to know <i>how</i> everything
should be done; it is not sufficient to give an order, you must also be in
a position to explain how it is to be carried out I felt quite guilty when
I saw the picture in <i>Punch</i> the other day, of a young and
inexperienced matron requesting her cook "not to put any lumps into the
melted butter," and reflected that I did not know how lumps should be kept
out; so, as I am fortunate enough to number among my new friends a lady
who is as clever in these culinary details as she is bright and charming
in society, I immediately went to her for a lesson in the art of making
melted butter without putting lumps into it.</p>
<p>The great complaint, the never-ending subject of comparison and
lamentation among ladies, is the utter ignorance and inefficiency of their
female servants. As soon as a ship comes in it is besieged with people who
want servants, but it is very rare to get one who knows how to do anything
as it ought to be done. Their lack of all knowledge of the commonest
domestic duties is most surprising, and makes one wonder who in England
did the necessary things of daily cottage life for them, for they appear
to have done nothing for themselves hitherto. As for a woman knowing how
to cook, that seems the very last accomplishment they acquire; a girl will
come to you as a housemaid at 25 pounds per annum, and you will find that
she literally does not know how to hold her broom, and has never handled a
duster. When you ask a nurse her qualifications for the care of perhaps
two or three young children, you may find, on close cross-examination,
that she can recollect having once or twice "held mother's baby," and that
she is very firm in her determination that "you'll keep baby yourself o'
nights; mem!" A perfectly inexperienced girl of this sort will ask, and
get, 30 pounds or 35 pounds per annum, a cook from 35 pounds to 40 pounds;
and when they go "up country," they hint plainly they shall not stay long
with you, and ask higher wages, stipulating with great exactness how they
are to be conveyed free of all expense to and from their place.</p>
<p>Then, on the other hand, I must say they work desperately hard, and very
cheerfully: I am amazed how few servants are kept even in the large and
better class of houses. As a general rule, they, appear willing enough to
learn, and I hear no complaints of dishonesty or immorality, though many
moans are made of the rapidity with which a nice tidy young woman is
snapped up as a wife; but that is a complaint no one can sympathise with.
On most stations a married couple is kept; the man either to act as
shepherd, or to work in the garden and look after the cows, and the woman
is supposed to attend to the indoor comforts of the wretched
bachelor-master: but she generally requires to be taught how to bake a
loaf of bread, and boil a potato, as well as how to cook mutton in the
simplest form. In her own cottage at home, who did all these things for
her? These incapables are generally perfectly helpless and awkward at the
wash-tub; no one seems to expect servants to know their business, and it
is very fortunate if they show any capability of learning.</p>
<p>I must end my long letter by telling you a little story of my own personal
experience in the odd ways of these girls. The housemaid at the
boarding-house where we have stayed since we left Heathstock is a fat,
sonsy, good-natured girl, perfectly ignorant and stupid, but she has not
been long in the colony, and seems willing to learn. She came to me the
other day, and, without the least circumlocution or hesitation, asked me
if I would lend her my riding-habit as a pattern to give the tailor;
adding that she wanted my best and newest. As soon as I could speak for
amazement, I naturally asked why; she said she had been given a
riding-horse, that she had loaned a saddle, and bought a hat, so now she
had nothing on her mind except the habit; and further added, that she
intended to leave her situation the day before the races, and that it was
"her fixed intent" to appear on horseback each day, and all day long, at
these said races. I inquired if she knew how to ride? No; she had never
mounted any animal in her life. I suggested that she had better take some
lessons before her appearance in public; but she said her mistress did not
like to spare her to "practise," and she stuck steadily to her point of
wanting my habit as a pattern. I could not lend it to her, fortunately,
for it had been sent up to the station with my saddle, etc.; so had she
been killed, as I thought not at all unlikely, at least my conscience
would not have reproached me for aiding and abetting her equestrian freak.
I inquired from every one who went to the races if they saw or heard of
any accident to a woman on horseback, and I most anxiously watched the
newspapers to see if they contained any notice of the sort, but as there
has been no mention of any catastrophe, I suppose she has escaped safely.
Her horse must have been quieter and better broken than they generally
are. F—— says that probably it was a very old "station screw."
I trust so, for her sake!</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter VII: A young colonist.—the town and its neighbourhood. </h2>
<p>Christchurch, March 1866. I must begin my letter this mail with a piece of
domestic news, and tell you of the appearance of your small nephew, now
three weeks old. The youth seems inclined to adapt himself to
circumstances, and to be as sturdy and independent as colonial children
generally are. All my new friends and neighbours proved most kind and
friendly, and were full of good offices. Once I happened to say that I did
not like the food as it was cooked at the boarding-house; and the next
day, and for many days after, all sorts of dainties were sent to me,
prepared by hands which were as skilful on the piano, or with a pencil, as
they were in handling a saucepan. New books were lent to me, and I was
never allowed to be without a beautiful bouquet. One young lady used
constantly to walk in to town, some two or three miles along a hot and
dusty road, laden with flowers for me, just because she saw how thoroughly
I enjoyed her roses and carnations. Was it not good of her?</p>
<p>Christchurch has relapsed into the quietude, to call it by no harsher
name. The shearing is finished all over the country, and the "squatters"
(as owners of sheep-stations are called) have returned to their stations
to vegetate, or work, as their tastes and circumstances may dictate. Very
few people live in the town except the tradespeople; the professional men
prefer little villas two or three miles off. These houses stand in grounds
of their own, and form a very pretty approach to Christchurch, extending a
few miles on all sides: There are large trees bordering most of the
streets, which give a very necessary shade in summer; they are nearly all
English sorts, and have only been planted within a few years. Poplars,
willows, and the blue gum grow quickest, are least affected by the high
winds, and are therefore the most popular. The banks of the pretty little
river Avon, upon which Christchurch is built, are thickly fringed with
weeping willows, interspersed with a few other trees, and with clumps of
tohi, which is exactly like the Pampas grass you know so well in English
shrubberies. I don't think I have ever told you that it has been found
necessary here to legislate against water-cress. It was introduced a few
years since, and has spread so rapidly as to become a perfect nuisance,
choking every ditch in the neighbourhood of Christchurch, blocking up
mill-streams, causing meadows to be flooded, and doing all kinds of
mischief.</p>
<p>Towards Riccarton, about four miles out of town, the Avon shows like a
slender stream a few inches wide, moving sluggishly between thick beds of
water-cress, which at this time of year are a mass of white blossom. It
looks so perfectly solid that whenever I am at Ilam, an insane desire to
step on it comes over me, much to F——'s alarm, who says he is
afraid to let me out of his sight, lest I should attempt to do so. I have
only seen one native "bush" or forest yet, and that is at Riccarton. This
patch of tall, gaunt pines serves as a landmark for miles. Riccarton is
one of the oldest farms in the colony, and I am told it possesses a
beautiful garden. I can only see the gable-end of a house peeping out from
among the trees as I pass. This bush is most carefully preserved, but I
believe that every high wind injures it.</p>
<p>Christchurch is very prettily situated; for although it stands on a
perfectly flat plain, towards the sea there are the Port Hills, and the
town itself is picturesque, owing to the quantities of trees and the
irregular form of the wooden houses; and as a background we have the most
magnificent chain of mountains—the back-bone of the island—running
from north to south, the highest peaks nearly always covered with snow,
even after such a hot summer as this has been. The climate is now
delicious, answering in time of year to your September; but we have far
more enjoyable weather than your autumns can boast of. If the atmosphere
were no older than the date of the settlement of the colony, it could not
feel more <i>youthful</i>, it is so light and bright, and exhilarating!
The one drawback, and the only one, is the north-west wind; and the worst
of it is, that it blows very often from this point. However, I am assured
that I have not yet seen either a "howling nor'-wester," nor its exact
antithesis, "a sutherly buster."</p>
<p>We have lately been deprived of the amusement of going to see our house
during the process of cutting it out, as it has passed that stage, and has
been packed on drays and sent to the station, with two or three men to put
it up. It was preceded by two dray-loads of small rough-hewn stone piles,
which are first let into the ground six or eight feet apart: the
foundation joists rest on these, so as just to keep the flooring from
touching the earth. I did not like this plan (which is the usual one) at
all, as it seemed to me so insecure for the house to rest only on these
stones. I told the builder that I feared a strong "nor'-wester" (and I
hear they are particularly strong in the Malvern Hills) would blow the
whole affair away. He did not scout the idea as much as I could have
wished, but held out hopes to me that the roof would "kep it down." I
shall never dare to trust the baby out of my sight, lest he should be
blown away; and I have a plan for securing his cradle, by putting large
heavy stones in it, somewhere out of his way, so that he need not be hurt
by them. Some of the houses are built of "cob," especially those erected
in the very early days, when sawn timber was rare and valuable: this
material is simply wet clay with chopped tussocks stamped in. It makes
very thick walls, and they possess the great advantage of being cool in
summer and warm in winter. Whilst the house is new nothing can be nicer;
but, in a few years, the hot winds dry up the clay so much, that it
becomes quite pulverized; and a lady who lives in one of these houses told
me, that during a high wind she had often seen the dust from the walls
blowing in clouds about the rooms, despite of the canvas and paper, and
with all the windows carefully closed.</p>
<p>Next week F—— is going up to the station, to unpack and
arrange a little, and baby and I are going to be taken care of at Ilam,
the most charming place I have yet seen. I am looking forward to my visit
there with great pleasure.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter VIII: Pleasant days at Ilam. </h2>
<p>Ilam, April 1866. We leave this to-morrow for the station in the most
extraordinary conveyance you ever saw. Imagine a flat tray with two low
seats in it, perched on four very high wheels, quite innocent of any step
or means of clambering in and out, and drawn, tandem-fashion, by two stout
mares; one of which has a little foal by her side. The advantage of this
vehicle is that it is very light, and holds a good deal of luggage. We
hope to accomplish the distance—fifty miles—in a day, easily.</p>
<p>Although this is not my first visit to Ilam, I don't think I have ever
described it to you. The house is of wood, two storeys high, and came out
from England! It is built on a brick foundation, which is quite unusual
here. Inside, it is exactly like a most charming English house, and when I
first stood in the drawing-room it was difficult to believe: that I was at
the other end of the world. All the newest books, papers, and periodicals
covered the tables, the newest music lay on the piano, whilst a profusion
of English greenhouse flowers in Minton's loveliest vases added to the
illusion. The Avon winds through the grounds, which are very pretty, and
are laid out in the English fashion; but in spite of the lawn with its
croquet-hoops and sticks, and the beds of flowers in all their late summer
beauty, there is a certain absence of the stiffness and trimness of
English pleasure-grounds, which shows that you have escaped from the
region of conventionalities. There are thick clumps of plantations, which
have grown luxuriantly, and look as if they had always been there. A curve
of the opposite bank is a dense mass of native flax bushes, with their
tall spikes of red blossom filling the air with a scent of honey, and
attracting all the bees in the neighbourhood. Ti-ti palms are dotted here
and there, and give a foreign and tropical appearance to the whole. There
is a large kitchen garden and orchard, with none of the restrictions of
high walls and locked gates which fence your English peaches and apricots.</p>
<p>The following is our receipt for killing time at Ilam:—After
breakfast, take the last <i>Cornhill</i> or <i>Macmillan</i>, put on a
shady hat, and sit or saunter by the river-side under the trees, gathering
any very tempting peach or apricot or plum or pear, until luncheon; same
thing until five o'clock tea; then cross the river by a rustic bridge,
ascend some turf steps to a large terrace-like meadow, sheltered from the
north-west winds by a thick belt of firs, blue gums, and poplars, and play
croquet on turf as level as a billiard-table until dinner. At these games
the cockatoo always assists, making himself very busy, waddling after his
mistress all over the field, and climbing up her mallet whenever he has an
opportunity. "Dr. Lindley"—so called from his taste for pulling
flowers to pieces—apparently for botanical purposes—is the
tamest and most affectionate of birds, and I do not believe he ever bit
any one in his life; he will allow himself to be pulled about, turned
upside down, scratched under his wings, all with the greatest
indifference, or rather with the most positive enjoyment. One evening I
could not play croquet for laughing at his antics. He took a sudden
dislike to a little rough terrier, and hunted him fairly off the ground at
last, chasing him all about, barking at him, and digging his beak into the
poor dog's paw. But the "Doctor's" best performance is when he imitates a
hawk. He reserves this fine piece of acting until his mistress is feeding
her poultry; then, when all the hens and chickens, turkeys, and pigeons
are in the quiet enjoyment of their breakfast or supper, the peculiar
shrill cry of a hawk is heard overhead, and the Doctor is seen circling in
the air, uttering a scream occasionally. The fowls never find out that it
is a hoax, but run to shelter, cackling in the greatest alarm—hens
clucking loudly for their chicks, turkeys crouching under the bushes, the
pigeons taking refuge in their house; as soon as the ground is quite
clear, Cocky changes his wild note for peals of laughter from a high tree,
and finally alighting on the top of a hen-coop filled with trembling
chickens, remarks in a suffocated voice, "You'll be the death of me."</p>
<p>I must reverse the proverb about the ridiculous and the sublime, and
finish my letter by telling you of Ilam's chief outdoor charm: from all
parts of the garden and grounds I can feast my eyes on the glorious chain
of mountains which I have before told you of, and my bedroom window has a
perfect panoramic view of them. I watch them under all their changes of
tint, and find each new phase the most beautiful. In the very early
morning I have often stood shivering at my window to see the noble outline
gradually assuming shape, and finally standing out sharp and clear against
a dazzling sky; then, as the sun rises, the softest rose-coloured and
golden tints touch the highest peaks, the shadows deepening by the
contrast. Before a "nor'-wester" the colours over these mountains and in
the sky are quite indescribable; no one but Turner could venture upon such
a mixture of pale sea-green with deep turquoise blue, purple with crimson
and orange. One morning an arch-like appearance in the clouds over the
furthest ranges was pointed out to me as the sure forerunner of a violent
gale from the north-west, and the prognostic was fulfilled. It was formed
of clouds of the deepest and richest colours; within its curve lay a bare
expanse of a wonderful green tint, crossed by the snowy <i>silhouette</i>
of the Southern Alps. A few hours afterwards the mountains were quite
hidden by mist, and a furious gale of hot wind was shaking the house as if
it must carry it off into the sky; it blew so continuously that the trees
and shrubs never seemed to rise for a moment against it.</p>
<p>These hot winds affect infants and children a good deal, and my baby is
not at all well. However, his doctor thinks the change to the station will
set him all right again, so we are hurrying off much sooner than our kind
friends here wish, and long before the little house in the hills can
possibly be made comfortable, though F—— is working very hard
to get things settled for us.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter IX: Death in our new home—New Zealand children. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, Malvern Hills, May 1866. I do not like to allow the first
Panama steamer to go without a line from me: this is the only letter I
shall attempt, and it will be but a short and sad one, for we are still in
the first bitterness of grief for the loss of our dear little baby. After
I last wrote to you he became very ill, but we hoped that his malady was
only caused by the unhealthiness of Christchurch during the autumn, and
that he would soon revive and get on well in this pure, beautiful mountain
air. We consequently hurried here as soon as ever we could get into the
house, and whilst the carpenters were still in it. Indeed, there was only
one bedroom ready for us when I arrived. The poor little man rallied at
first amazingly; the weather was exquisitely bright and sunny, and yet
bracing. Baby was to be kept in the open air as much as possible, so F——
and I spent our days out on the downs near the house, carrying our little
treasure by turns: but all our care was fruitless: he got another and more
violent attack about a fortnight ago, and after a few hours of suffering
he was taken to the land where pain is unknown. During the last twelve
hours of his life, as I sat before the fire with him on my lap, poor F——kneeling
in a perfect agony of grief by my side, my greatest comfort was in looking
at that exquisite photograph from Kehren's picture of the "Good Shepherd,"
which hangs over my bedroom mantelpiece, and thinking that our sweet
little lamb would soon be folded in those Divine, all-embracing Arms. It
is not a common picture; and the expression of the Saviour's face is most
beautiful, full of such immense feminine compassion and tenderness that it
makes me feel more vividly, "In all our sorrows He is afflicted." In such
a grief as this I find the conviction of the reality and depth of the
Divine sympathy is my only true comfort; the tenderest human love falls
short of the feeling that, without any words to express our sorrow, God
knows all about it; that He would not willingly afflict or grieve us, and
that therefore the anguish which wrings our hearts is absolutely necessary
in some mysterious way for our highest good. I fear I have often thought
lightly of others' trouble in the loss of so young a child; but now I know
what it is. Does it not seem strange and sad, that this little house in a
distant, lonely spot, no sooner becomes a home than it is baptized, as it
were, with tears? No doubt there are bright and happy days in store for us
yet, but these first ones here have been sadly darkened by this shadow of
death. Inanimate things have such a terrible power to wound one: though
everything which would remind me of Baby has been carefully removed and
hidden away by F——'s orders, still now and then I come across
some trifle belonging to him, and, as Miss Ingelow says—</p>
<p>"My old sorrow wakes and cries."<br/></p>
<p>Our loss is one too common out here, I am told: infants born in
Christchurch during the autumn very often die. Owing to the flatness of
the site of the town, it is almost impossible to get a proper system of
drainage; and the arrangements seem very bad, if you are to judge from the
evil smells which are abroad in the evening. Children who are born on a
station, or taken there as soon as possible, almost invariably thrive, but
babies are very difficult to rear in the towns. If they get over the first
year, they do well; and I cannot really call to mind a single sickly, or
even delicate-looking child among the swarms which one sees everywhere.</p>
<p>I cannot say that I think colonial children prepossessing in either
manners or appearance, in spite of their ruddy cheeks and sturdy limbs.
Even quite little things are pert and independent, and give me the idea of
being very much spoiled. When you reflect on the utter absence of any one
who can really be called a nurse, this is not to be wondered at. The
mothers are thoroughly domestic and devoted to their home duties, far more
so than the generality of the same class at home. An English lady, with
even an extremely moderate income, would look upon her colonial sister as
very hard-worked indeed. The children cannot be entrusted entirely to the
care of an ignorant girl, and the poor mother has them with her all day
long; if she goes out to pay visits (the only recognized social duty
here), she has to take the elder children with her, but this early
introduction into society does not appear to polish the young visitors'
manners in the least. There is not much rest at night for the
mater-familias with the inevitable baby, and it is of course very
difficult for her to be correcting small delinquents all day long; so they
grow up with what manners nature gives them. There seems to me, however,
to be a greater amount of real domestic happiness out here than at home:
perhaps the want of places of public amusement may have something to do
with this desirable state of affairs, but the homes seem to be thoroughly
happy ones. A married man is an object of envy to his less fortunate
brethren, and he appears anxious to show that he appreciates his good
fortune. As for scandal, in the ordinary acceptation of the word, it is
unknown; gossip there is in plenty, but it generally refers to each
other's pecuniary arrangements or trifling peculiarities, and is all
harmless enough. I really believe that the life most people lead here is
as simple and innocent as can well be imagined. Each family is occupied in
providing for its own little daily wants and cares, which supplies the
mind and body with healthy and legitimate employment, and yet, as my
experience tells me, they have plenty of leisure to do a kind turn for a
neighbour. This is the bright side of colonial life, and there is more to
be said in its praise; but the counterbalancing drawback is, that the
people seem gradually to lose the sense of larger and wider interests;
they have little time to keep pace with the general questions of the day,
and anything like sympathy or intellectual appreciation is very rare. I
meet accomplished people, but seldom well-read ones; there is also too
much talk about money: "where the treasure is, there will the heart be
also;" and the incessant financial discussions are wearisome, at least to
me.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter X: Our station home. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, July 1866. We are now in mid-winter, and a more delicious
season cannot well be imagined; the early mornings and evenings and the
nights are very cold, but the hours from 10 A.M. till 5 P.M. are
exquisitely bright, and quite warm. We are glad of a fire at breakfast,
which is tolerably early, but we let it out and never think of relighting
it until dark. Above all, it is calm: I congratulate myself daily on the
stillness of the atmosphere, but F—— laughs and says, "Wait
until the spring." I bask all day in the verandah, carrying my books and
work there soon after breakfast; as soon as the sun goes down, however, it
becomes very cold. In an English house you would hardly feel it, but with
only one plank an inch thick, a lining-board and canvas and paper, between
you and a hard frost, a good fire is wanted. We burn coal found twelve
miles from this; it is not very good, being only what is called "lignite."
I don't know if that conveys to you a distinct impression of what it
really is. I should say it was a better sort of turf: it smoulders just in
the same way, and if not disturbed will remain many hours alight; it
requires a log of dry wood with it to make a really good blaze. Fuel is
most difficult to get here, and very expensive, as we have no available
"bush" on the Run; so we have first to take out a licence for cutting wood
in the Government bush, then to employ men to cut it, and hire a drayman
who possesses a team of bullocks and a dray of his own, to fetch it to us:
he can only take two journeys a day, as he has four miles to travel each
way, so that by the time the wood is stacked it costs us at least thirty
shillings a cord, and then there is the labour of sawing and cutting it
up. The coal costs us one pound a ton at the mouth of the pit, and the
carriage exactly doubles its price; besides which it is impossible to get
more, than a small quantity at a time, on account of the effect of the
atmosphere on it. Exposure to the air causes it to crumble into dust, and
although we keep our supply in a little shed for the purpose, it is wasted
to the extent of at least a quarter of each load. We are unusually
unfortunate in the matter of firing; most stations have a bush near to the
homestead, or greater facilities for draying than we possess.</p>
<p>You tell me to describe my little house to you, so I must try to make you
see it, only prefacing my attempt by warning you not to be disgusted or
disappointed at any shortcomings. The house has not been built in a pretty
situation, as many other things had to be considered before a picturesque
site: first it was necessary to build on a flat (as the valleys here are
called), not too far off the main track, on account of having to make the
road to it ourselves; the next thing to be thought of was shelter from the
north-west wind; then the soil must be fit for a garden, and a good creek,
or brook, which would not go dry in the summer, close at hand. At present,
everything out of doors is so unfinished that the place looks rather
desolate, and it will be some years before our plantations can attain a
respectable size, even allowing for the rapid growth in this climate. The
first step is to obtain shelter from our enemy the "nor'-wester," and for
this purpose we have planted quantities of broom in all directions; even
the large beds for vegetables in the garden have a hedge of Cape broom on
the exposed side; fortunately, the broom grows very quickly in spite of
the wind, and attains to a luxuriant beauty rarely seen in England. We
have put in many other trees, such as oaks, maples, etc., but not one is
higher than this table, except a few poplars; the ground immediately
outside the house has been dug up, and is awaiting the spring to be sown
with English grass; we have no attempt at a flower-garden yet, but have
devoted our energies to the vegetable one,—putting in fruit trees,
preparing strawberry and asparagus beds, and other useful things. Out of
doors matters would not even be as far advanced towards a garden and
plantation as they are if we had commenced operations ourselves, but the
ground has been worked since last year. I am glad we have chosen to build
our house here instead of at the homestead two miles off; for I like to be
removed from the immediate neighbourhood of all the work of the station,
especially from that of the "gallows,"—a high wooden frame from
which the carcases of the butchered sheep dangle; under the present
arrangement the shepherd brings us over our mutton as we want it.</p>
<p>Inside the house everything is comfortable and pretty, and, above all
things, looks thoroughly home-like. Out of the verandah you pass through a
little hall hung with whips and sticks, spurs and hats, and with a
bookcase full of novels at one end of it, into a dining-room, large enough
for us, with more books in every available corner, the prints you know so
well on the walls, and a trophy of Indian swords and hunting-spears over
the fireplace: this leads into the drawing-room, a bright, cheery little
room—more books and pictures, and a writing-table in the "<i>h</i>oriel."
In that tall, white, classical-shaped vase of Minton's which you helped me
to choose is the most beautiful bouquet, made entirely of ferns; it is a
constant object for my walks up the gullies, exploring little patches of
bush to search for the ferns, which grow abundantly under their shelter by
the creek. I have a small but comfortable bedroom, and there is a little
dressing-room for F—— and the tiniest spare room you ever saw;
it really is not bigger than the cabin of a ship. I think the kitchen is
the chief glory of the house, boasting a "Leamington range" a luxury quite
unknown in these parts, where all the cooking is done on an American
stove,—a very good thing in its way, but requiring to be constantly
attended to. There is a good-sized storeroom, in which F—— has
just finished putting me up some cupboards, and a servants' room. It is
not a palace is it? But it is quite large enough to hold a great deal of
happiness. Outside, the premises are still more diminutive; a little
wash-house stands near the kitchen door, and further up the enclosure is a
stable, and a small room next it for saddles, and a fowl-house and
pig-stye, and a coal-shed. Now you know everything about my surroundings;
but—there is always a <i>but</i> in everything—I have one
great grievance, and I hope you will appreciate its magnitude.</p>
<p>It was impossible for F—— to come up here when the house was
first commenced, and the wretch of a builder deliberately put the
drawing-and dining-room fireplaces in the corner, right up against the
partition wall, of course utterly destroying the comfort as well as the
symmetry of the rooms. I am convinced some economy of bricks is at the
bottom of this arrangement, especially as the house was built by contract;
but the builder pretends to be surprised that I don't admire it, and says,
"Why, it's so oncommon, mum!" I assure you, when I first saw the
ridiculous appearance of the drawing-room pier-glass in the corner, I
should liked to have screamed out at the builder (like the Queen in "Alice
in Wonderland"), "Cut off his head!"</p>
<p>When we were packing up the things to come here, our friends expressed
their astonishment at our taking so many of the little elegancies of life,
such as drawing-room ornaments, pictures, etc. Now it is a great mistake
not to bring such things, at all events a few of them, for they are not to
be bought here, and they give the new home a certain likeness to the old
one which is always delightful. I do not advise people to make large
purchases of elegancies for a colonial life, but a few pretty little
trifles will greatly improve the look of even a New Zealand up-country
drawing-room.</p>
<p>You have asked me also about our wardrobes. Gentlemen wear just what they
would on a Scotch or English farm; in summer they require perhaps a
lighter hat, and long rides are always taken in boots and breeches. A lady
wears exactly what would be suitable in the country in England, except
that I should advise her to eschew muslin; the country outside the home
paddock is too rough for thin material; she also wants thick boots if she
is a good walker, and I find nails or little screws in the soles a great
help for hill-walking. A hat is my only difficulty: you really want a
shady hat for a protection against the sun, but there are very few days in
the year on which you can ride in anything but a close, small hat, with
hardly any brim at all, and even this must have capabilities of being
firmly fastened on the head. My nice, wide-brimmed Leghorn hangs idly in
the hall: there is hardly a morning still enough to induce me to put it on
even to go and feed my chickens or potter about the garden. This being
winter, I live in a short linsey dress, which is just right as to warmth,
and not heavy. It is a mistake to bring too much: a year's supply will be
quite enough; fresh material can easily be procured in Christchurch or any
of the large towns, or sent out by friends. I find my sewing-machine the
greatest possible comfort, and as time passes on and my clothes need
remodelling it will be still more use ful. Hitherto I have used it chiefly
for my friends' benefit; whilst I was in town I constantly had little
frocks brought to me to tuck, and here I employ it in making quilted cloth
hats for my gentlemen neighbours.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XI: Housekeeping, and other matters. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, September 1866. I am writing to you at the end of a fortnight
of very hard work, for I have just gone through my first experience in
changing servants; those I brought up with me four months ago were nice,
tidy girls and as a natural consequence of these attractive qualities they
have both left me to be married. I sent them down to Christchurch in the
dray, and made arrangements for two more servants to return in the same
conveyance at the end of a week. In the meantime we had to do everything
for ourselves, and on the whole we found this picnic life great fun. The
household consists, besides F—— and me, of a cadet, as they
are called—he is a clergyman's son learning sheep-farming under our
auspices—and a boy who milks the cows and does odd jobs out of
doors. We were all equally ignorant of practical cookery, so the chief
responsibility rested on my shoulders, and cost me some very anxious
moments, I assure you, for a cookery-book is after all but a broken reed
to lean on in a real emergency; it starts by assuming that its unhappy
student possesses a knowledge of at least the rudiments of the art,
whereas it ought not to disdain to tell you whether the water in which
potatoes are to be boiled should be hot or cold. I must confess that some
of my earliest efforts were both curious and nasty, but E ate my numerous
failures with the greatest good-humour; the only thing at which he made a
wry face was some soup into which a large lump of washing-soda had
mysteriously conveyed itself; and I also had to undergo a good deal of
"chaff" about my first omelette, which was of the size and consistency of
a roly-poly pudding. Next to these failures I think the bread was my
greatest misfortune; it went wrong from the first. One night I had
prepared the tin dish full of flour, made a hole in the midst of the soft
white heap, and was about to pour in a cupful of yeast to be mixed with
warm water (you see I know all about it in theory), when a sudden panic
seized me, and I was afraid to draw the cork of the large champagne bottle
full of yeast, which appeared to be very much "up." In this dilemma I went
for F——. You must know that he possesses such extraordinary
and revolutionary theories on the subject of cooking, that I am obliged to
banish him from the kitchen altogether, but on this occasion I thought I
should be glad of his assistance. He came with the greatest alacrity;
assured me he knew all about it, seized the big bottle, shook it
violently, and twitched out the cork: there was a report like a
pistol-shot, and all my beautiful yeast flew up to the ceiling of the
kitchen, descending in a shower on my head; and F—— turned the
bottle upside down over the flour, emptying the dregs of the hops and
potatoes into my unfortunate bread. However, I did not despair, but mixed
it up according to the directions given, and placed it on the stove; but,
as it turned out, in too warm a situation, for when I went early the next
morning to look at it, I found a very dry and crusty mass. Still, nothing
daunted, I persevered in the attempt, added more flour and water, and
finally made it up into loaves, which I deposited in the oven. That bread
<i>never</i> baked! I tried it with a knife in the orthodox manner, always
to find that it was raw inside. The crust gradually became several inches
thick, but the inside remained damp, and turned quite black at last; I
baked it until midnight, and then I gave it up and retired to bed in deep
disgust. I had no more yeast and could not try again, so we lived on
biscuits and potatoes till the dray returned at the end of the week,
bringing, however, only one servant. Owing to some confusion in the
drayman's arrangements, the cook had been left behind, and "Meary," the
new arrival, professed her willingness to supply her place; but on trial
being made of her abilities, she proved to be quite as inexperienced as I
was; and to each dish I proposed she should attempt, the unvarying answer
was, "The missis did all that where I come from." During the first few
days after her arrival her chief employment was examining the various
knick-knacks about the drawing-room; in her own department she was greatly
taken with the little cottage mangle. She mangled her own apron about
twenty times a day, and after each attempt I found her contemplating it
with her head on one side, and saying to herself, "'Deed, thin, it's as
smooth as smooth; how iver does it do it?" A few days later the cook
arrived. She is not all I could wish, being also Irish, and having the
most extraordinary notions of the use, or rather the abuse, of the various
kitchen implements: for instance, she will poke the fire with the toasting
fork, and disregards my gentle hints about the poker; but at all events
she can both roast mutton and bake bread. "Meary" has been induced to wash
her face and braid up her beautiful hair, and now shines forth as a very
pretty good-humoured girl. She is as clever and quick as possible, and
will in time be a capital housemaid. She has taken it into her head that
she would like to be a "first-rater," as she calls it, and works
desperately hard in the prosecution of her new fancy.</p>
<p>I have never told you of the Sunday services we established here from the
first week of our arrival. There is no church nearer than those in
Christchurch, nor—I may mention parenthetically—is there a
doctor within the same distance. As soon as our chairs and tables were in
their proper places, we invited our shepherds and those neighbours
immediately around us to attend service on Sunday afternoon at three
o'clock. F—— officiates as clergyman; <i>my</i> duties
resemble those of a beadle, as I have to arrange the congregation in their
places, see that they have Prayer-books, etc. Whenever we go out for a
ride, we turn our horses' heads up some beautiful valley, or deep gorge of
a river, in search of the huts of our neighbours' shepherds, that we may
tell the men of these services and invite them to attend. As yet, we have
met with no refusals, but it will give you an idea of the scantiness of
our population when I tell you that, after all our exertions, the
"outsiders" only amount to fourteen, and of these at least half are
gentlemen from neighbouring stations. With this number, in addition to our
own small group, we consider that we form quite a respectable gathering.
The congregation all arrive on horseback, each attended by at least two
big colley dogs; the horses are turned into the paddock, the saddles
deposited in the back verandah, and the dogs lie quietly down by their
respective masters' equipments until they are ready to start homewards.
There is something very wild and touching in these Sunday services. If the
weather is quite clear and warm, they are held in the verandah; but unless
it is a very sunny afternoon, it is too early in the year yet for this.</p>
<p>The shepherds are a very fine class of men as a rule, and I find them most
intelligent; they lead solitary lives, and are fond of reading; and as I
am anxious to substitute a better sort of literature in their huts than
the tattered yellow volumes which generally form their scanty library, I
lend them books from my own small collection. But, as I foresee that this
supply will soon be exhausted, we have started a Book Club, and sent to
London for twenty pounds' worth of books as a first instalment. We shall
get them second-hand from a large library, so I hope to receive a good
boxful. The club consists of twenty-eight members now, and will probably
amount to thirty-two, which is wonderful for this district. At the close
of a year from the first distribution of the books they are to be divided
into lots as near as possible in value to a pound each, the parcels to be
numbered, and corresponding figures written on slips of paper, which are
to be shaken up in a hat and drawn at random, each member claiming the
parcel of which the number answers to that on his ticket. This is the
fairest way I can think of for the distribution, and every one seems
satisfied with the scheme. The most popular books are those of travel or
adventure; unless a novel is really very good indeed, they do not care
about it.</p>
<p>The last little item of home news with which I must close this month's
budget is, that F—— has been away for a few days on a skating
excursion. A rather distant neighbour of ours called on his way up to the
station far back among the hills, and gave such a glowing account of the
condition of the ice in that part of the country, that F——,
who is very fond of the amusement, was persuaded to accompany him. Our
friend is the son of the Bishop, and owns a large station about twenty-six
miles from this. At the back of his run the hills rise to a great height,
and nestled among them lie a chain of lakes, after the largest of which
(Lake Coleridge) Mr. H——'s station is named. On one of the
smaller lakes, called by the classical name of "Ida," the ice attains to a
great thickness; for it is surrounded by such lofty hills that during the
winter months the sun hardly touches it, and it is commonly reported that
a heavily-laden bullock-dray could cross it in perfect safety. F——was
away nearly a week, and appears to have enjoyed himself thoroughly, though
it will seem to you more of hard work than amusement; for he and Mr. H——,
and some other gentlemen who were staying there, used to mount directly
after breakfast, with their skates tied to their saddle-bow, and ride
twelve miles to Lake Ida, skate all through the short winter's day,
lunching at the solitary hut of a gentleman-farmer close by the lake, and
when it grew dusk riding home again. The gentlemen in this country are in
such good training through constant exercise, that they appear able to
stand any amount of fatigue without minding it.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XII: My first expedition. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, October 1866. This ought to be early spring, but the weather
is really colder and more disagreeable than any which winter brought us;
and, proverbially fickle as spring sunshine and showers are in England,
ours is a far more capricious and trying season. Twice during this month
have I been a victim to these sudden changes of climate; on the first
occasion it was most fortunate that we had reached the shelter of a
friendly and hospitable roof, for it was three days before we could
re-cross the mountain-pass which lay between us and home. One beautiful
spring morning F—— asked me if I would like to ride across the
hills, and pay my first visit to some kind and old friends of his, who
were among the earliest arrivals in the province, and who have made a
lovely home for themselves at the foot of a great Bush on the other side
of our range. I was delighted at the idea, for I have had very little
opportunity of going about since we came here, owing to the short winter
days and the amount of occupation at home consequent on a new
establishment.</p>
<p>Directly after breakfast, the horses were caught and saddled, and we
started in high spirits. As we rode up the long, sunny valley stretching
away for miles at the back of the house, F—— pointed out to
me, with all a sheep-farmer's pride, the hundreds of pretty little
curly-fleeced lambs skipping about the low hill-sides. After we passed our
own boundary fence we came upon a very bad track,—this is the name
by which all roads are called, and they do not deserve a better,—but
it was the only path to our destination. The air was mild and balmy, and
the sun shone brightly as we slowly picked our way across bogs and creeks,
and up and down steep, slippery hill-sides; but just as we reached the
lowest saddle of the range and prepared to descend, a cold wind met us. In
an instant the sunshine was overclouded, and F——, pointing to
a grey bank of cloud moving quickly towards us, said, "There is a
tremendous sou'-wester coming up; we had better push on for shelter, or
you'll be drowned:" but, alas! at each step the road grew worse and worse;
where it was level the ground was literally honeycombed with deep holes
half full of water, and at last we came to a place where the horse had to
descend a flight of stone steps, each step being extremely slippery and
some way below the other; and at the bottom of this horrible staircase
there was a wide jump to be taken, the spring being off the lowest step,
and the jump upwards alighting on a steep bank up which the horses
scrambled like cats. Getting wet through appeared to me a very minor evil
compared to the dangers of such a road, but F—— urged me
forward, with assurances that the horse knew the path perfectly well and
could carry me at a gallop quite safely; but it was impossible to infuse
sufficient courage into my drooping heart to induce me to go faster than a
walk.</p>
<p>All this time the storm drew rapidly nearer, the wind blew in icy cold
gusts, the hail came down in large stones, pelting our faces till they
tingled again; it was nearly an hour before we rode up to the hospitable,
ever-open porch door of Rockwood. I was immediately lifted off my saddle
by kind and strong arms, and carried with frozen limbs and streaming habit
into the kitchen, for I was as unfit for the drawing-room as my own
water-spaniel. A blazing wood fire was hastily lighted in one of the
bed-rooms, and thither the good hostess conveyed me. I emerged from that
apartment the most extraordinary figure you ever saw. Imagine me arrayed
in a short and very wide crinoline, over which was a bright-coloured
linsey petticoat; an old pilot-coat for a jacket, huge carpet slippers on
my feet, and my dripping hair hanging loose over my shoulders! I assure
you, I looked like the portraits in books of travel, of the Tahitian women
when they first assumed clothes; and the worst of it was, that I had to
remain in this costume for three whole days. To return was impossible, the
storm from the S.W. raged all that evening. When we opened our eyes next
morning, snow was lying some inches deep, and still falling fast; there
was no cessation for forty-eight hours, and then we had to give it time to
thaw a little, so that it was Sunday morning before we started on our
homeward ride. In the meantime, nothing could afford a greater contrast to
the wild weather out of doors than the snug brightness within. Blazing
logs of pine and black birch made every room warm and cheery; all day we
chatted and amused ourselves in different ways (I learned to make a
capital pudding, and acquainted myself with the mysteries of "junket"); in
the evenings we had whist for an hour, and then either round games or
songs. The young men of the house have nice voices and a great feeling for
music, and some of the trios and glees went very well indeed. The only
thing which spoilt my enjoyment was the constantly recurring remembrance
of that terrible road. F—— tried to comfort me by assurances
that the snow would have filled up the worst places so much that I should
not see them, but, strange to say, I failed to derive any consolation from
that idea; however, we accomplished the journey back safely, but with many
slips and slides. As soon as we came on our own run, F——began
to look out for dead lambs, but fortunately there were not many for him to
mourn over; they must have taken shelter under the low hills, to leeward
of the storm.</p>
<p>The second ride was much longer, and if possible a more disagreeable one.
It began just in the same way; we were again decoyed out by sunshine and
soft air for a ride round the run, starting about half-past ten. The
scenery was beautiful, and we enjoyed ourselves immensely. The track lay
along our own boundary fence most of the way, and we had ridden about ten
miles, when we stopped at one of our shepherds' huts, technically called
an out station, and accepted his offer of luncheon. He gave us capital
tea, with an egg beaten up in it as a substitute for milk, cold mutton,
bread, and a cake; the reason of these unwonted luxuries was that he kept
fowls, and I was very jealous at seeing two broods of chickens out, whilst
mine are still in the shell. This man is quite an artist, and the walls of
his but were covered with bold pen-and-ink sketches, chiefly reminiscences
of the hunting-field in England, or his own adventures "getting out" wild
cattle on the Black Hills in the north of the province: he leads an
extremely-solitary existence, his dogs being his only companions; his
duties consist in riding daily a boundary down the gorge of the river,
which he has to cross and re-cross many times: and he has to supply the
home station and our house with mutton, killing four or five sheep a week.
He is employed out of doors all day, but has plenty of time in the
evenings for reading I found him well-informed and intelligent, and he
expresses himself exceedingly well. We rested here an hour, and as we went
outside and prepared to mount, F—— said, "I really believe
there is <i>another</i> sou'-wester coming up," and so there was: we could
not go fast, for we were riding over a dry river-bed, composed entirely of
loose large stones. Every few hundred yards we had to cross the river
Selwyn, which was rising rapidly, as the storm had been raging in the
mountains long before it reached us; on each side were high, steep hills,
and in some places the river filled up the gorge entirely, and we had to
ride in the water up to our saddle-girths. All this time the rain was
coming down in sheets, but the wind grew colder and colder; at last the
rain turned into snow, which speedily changed us and our horses into white
moving figures. Eight long weary miles of this had we, only able to trot
the last two, and those over very swampy ground. In your country a severe
cold would probably have been the least evil of this escapade, but here no
such consequence follow a good wetting; the houses are so little real
protection from the weather, that you are forced to live as it were in the
open air, whether you like it or not, and this hardens the constitution so
much, that it is not easy to take cold from a little extra exposure. Men
are apt to be careless and remain in their wet things, or stand before a
fire till their clothes dry on them; and whenever I scold any one for
being foolish, he always acknowledges that if he does but change when he
comes into a house, he <i>never</i> catches cold from any amount of
exposure to the severest weather.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XIII: Bachelor hospitality.—a gale on shore. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, November 1866. We have lately made a much longer excursion
than those I told you of last, month, and this time have been fortunate in
meeting with fine weather above all, our expedition has been over
perfectly level ground, and on a good "track," which has greatly increased
its charms in my eyes. A fortnight ago early summer set fairly in, and
some bachelor neighbours took advantage of the change to ride over to see
us, and arrange a plan for the following week. It all fitted in nicely,
for F—— was obliged to go to Christchurch at that time, and
the first idea of the expedition originated in my saying how dull I was at
the station when he was away. I can get on very well all day; with my
various employments—feeding the chickens, taking the big dogs out
for a walk, and so on: but after the house is quiet and silent for the
night, and the servants have gone to bed, a horrible lonely eerie feeling
comes over me; the solitude is so dreary, and the silence so intense, only
broken occasionally by the wild, melancholy cry of the weka. However, I am
very rarely tried in this way, and when I am it can't be helped, if that
is any consolation.</p>
<p>I forget whether I told you that we left all "evening things," and other
toilette necessaries which would not be wanted up country, behind us in
Christchurch, so as to avoid the trouble of sending any luggage backwards
or forwards. It is necessary to mention this, to account for the very
light marching order in which we travelled. It was a lovely summer morning
on which we left home, meaning to be away nearly a week, from Monday till
Saturday. We were well mounted, and all our luggage consisted of my little
travelling-bag fastened to the pommel of my saddle, containing our brushes
and combs, and what is termed a "swag" in front of F——'s
saddle; that is, a long narrow bundle, in this instance enclosed in a neat
waterproof case, and fastened with two straps to the "D's," which are
steel loops let in in four places to all colonial saddles, for the purpose
of carrying blankets, etc.; they derive their name apparently from their
resemblance to the letter. In this parcel our most indispensable garments
were tightly packed. We cantered gaily along on the way to Christchurch,
the horses appearing to enjoy the delicious air and soft springy turf as
much as we did. There was a river and half-a-dozen creeks to be crossed;
but they are all quite low at this time of year. As we stood in one of
them to let the horses drink and cool their legs, I saw a huge eel hidden
under the shadow of a high overhanging bank, waiting till the evening to
come out and feed upon the myriads of flies and little white moths that
skim over the surface of the water.</p>
<p>It is considered a great advantage to our station that there is only the
river Selwyn (of which the Maori name is the Wai-kiri-kiri) between us and
town, not only for our own convenience, but because it is easy to take
sheep across it, and it offers no difficulties to the wool drays. This
river has a very good reputation, and is very rarely dangerous to cross;
whereas the Rakaia and the Rangitata towards the south, and the
Waimakiriri towards the north, of Christchurch, are most difficult, and
always liable to sudden freshes. The general mode of crossing the larger
rivers is by a boat, with the horse swimming behind; but accidents
constantly occur from the foolhardiness of people attempting to ford them
alone on horseback: they are lost in quicksands, or carried down by the
current, before they can even realize that they are in danger. The common
saying in New Zealand is, that people only die from drowning and
drunkenness. I am afraid the former is generally the result of the latter.</p>
<p>From the first our road lay with our backs to the hills; but as we
cantered along the plains, I was often obliged to turn round and admire
their grand outlines. The highest ranges were still snow-white, and made a
magnificent background against the summer sky. An easy twelve miles' ride
brought us to a charming little station, called by the pretty native name
of Waireka; here lived our three bachelor hosts, and a nicer or more
comfortable home in a distant land could not be desired. The house has
been built for some years, consequently the plantations about it and the
garden have grown up well, and the willows, gum-trees, and poplars shelter
it perfectly, besides giving it such a snug home look. It stands on a vast
plain, without even an undulation of the ground near it; but the mountains
form a grand panoramic view. There is a large wide verandah round two
sides of the house, with French windows opening into it; and I could not
help feeling impatient to see my own creepers in such luxuriant, beauty as
these roses and honeysuckles were. It was half amusing and half pathetic
to notice the preparations which had been made to receive a lady guest,
and the great anxiety of my hosts to ensure my being quite as comfortable
as I am at home. Much had been said beforehand about the necessity of
making up my mind to rough it in bachelor quarters, so I was surprised to
find all sorts of luxuries in my room, especially a dainty little
toilette-table, draped with white cloths (a big wooden packing-case was
its foundation). Its ornaments were all sorts of nondescript treasures,
placed in boxes at the last moment of leaving the English hall or rectory
by careful loving hands of mothers and sisters, and lying unused for years
until now. There was a little china tray, which had been slipped into some
corner by a child-sister anxious to send some possession of her "very own"
out to the other end of the world; there was a vase with flowers; a
parti-coloured pin-cushion of very gay silks, probably the parting gift of
an old nurse; and a curious old-fashioned essence bottle, with
eau-de-cologne; the surrounding country had been ransacked to procure a
piece of scented soap. The only thing to remind me that I was not in an
English cottage was the opossum rug with which the neat little bed was
covered. The sitting-room looked the picture of cosy comfort, with its
well-filled book-shelves, arm-chairs, sofa with another opossum rug thrown
over it, and the open fireplace filled with ferns and tufts of the white
feathery Tohi grass in front of the green background. We enjoyed our
luncheon, or rather early dinner, immensely after our ride; and in the
afternoon went out to see the nice large garden (such a contrast to our
wretched little beginnings), and finally strolled on to the inevitable
wool-shed, where the gentlemen had an animated "sheep talk." I rather
enjoy these discussions, though they are prefaced by an apology for
"talking shop;" but it amuses me, and I like to see the samples of wool,
which are generally handed about in the heat of a great argument, the long
white locks are so glistening, and soft, and crinkly.</p>
<p>My five-o'clock tea was duly remembered, and then, as there was nothing
more to see out of doors within a short distance, I proposed that I should
make a cake. The necessary ingredients were quickly collected. I had
relays of volunteers to beat up the eggs, and though I suffered great
anxiety until it was cut at supper, it turned out satisfactorily. The
worst of my cookery is, that while I always follow the same directions
most carefully, there is great uncertainty and variety about the result.
In the evening we played round games. But we all went early to bed, as, we
had to be up betimes, and in the saddle by seven o'clock, to catch the
9-30 train at Rolleston; twenty miles off. We had a beautiful, still
morning for our ride, and reached the station—a shed standing out on
the plain—in time to see our horses safely paddocked before the
train started for Christchurch. The distance by rail was only fifteen
miles, so we were not long about it; and we walked to the hotel from the
railway-station in the town. A bath and breakfast were both very
enjoyable, and then F—— went out to transact his business, and
I employed myself in unpacking and <i>ironing</i> a ball-dress for a
party, to which we were engaged that evening. There was also another ball
the following night. The second was a very late one, and we had scarcely
an hour's sleep before we were obliged to get up and start by the 6 A.M.
train back to Rolleston, where we remounted our horses and rode to dear
little Waireka in time for breakfast. By the evening I was sufficiently
rested to make another cake, which also, happily, turned out well.</p>
<p>We intended to return home the next day (Friday), but a terrific
"nor'-wester" came on in the night, and it was impossible to stir out of
the house; it was the severest gale since our arrival, and it is hardly
possible to give you a correct idea of the force and fury of the wind. Not
a glimpse of the mountains was to be seen; a haze of dust, as thick as any
fog, shut everything out. The sheep had all taken refuge under the high
banks of the creeks. It is curious that sheep always feed head to wind in
a nor'-west gale, whereas they will drift for miles before a sou'-wester.
The trees bent almost flat before the hot breath of this hurricane, and
although the house was built of cob, and its walls were very thick and
solid, the creaking and swaying of the shingled roof kept me in perpetual
alarm. The verandah was a great protection; and yet the small
river-pebbles, of which the garden-walk was made, were dashed against the
windows like hailstones by each gust. We amused ourselves indoors by the
study and composition of acrostics, and so got through an imprisonment of
two days, without a moment's cessation of the wind; but towards sunset on
Saturday there were signs of a lull, and about midnight the gale dropped;
and we heard the grateful, refreshing sound of soft and continuous rain,
and when we came out to breakfast on Sunday morning everything looked
revived again. It is a most fortunate meteorological fact that these very
high winds are generally succeeded by heavy rain; everything is so parched
and shrivelled up by them that I do not know what would become of the
vegetation otherwise. We held a council, to determine what had better be
done about returning home, and finally decided to risk a wet ride sooner
than disappoint the little congregation; for should it prove a fine
afternoon, those who lived near would certainly come; so we mounted after
breakfast.</p>
<p>I was wrapped in one of the gentlemen's macintoshes, and found the ride
far from disagreeable. As we neared our own station we began to look out
for signs of disaster; and about half a mile from the house saw some of
the vanes from the chimneys on the track; a little nearer home, across the
path lay a large zinc chimney-pot; then another; and when we came close
enough to see the house distinctly, it looked very much dwarfed without
its chimneys. There had been a large pile of empty boxes at the back of
the stable; these were all blown away in the gale. One huge packing-case
was sailing tranquilly about on the pond, and planks and fragments of zinc
were strewn over the paddock. The moment we reached the house, Mr. U——,
the gentleman-cadet of whom I have told you, came out, with a melancholy
face, to tell me that a large wooden cage, full of the canaries which I
had brought from England with me, had been blown out of the verandah,
though it was on the most sheltered side of the house. It really seemed
incredible at first, but the cage was lying in ruins in the middle of the
paddock, and all my birds except one had disappeared. It happened in the
middle of the night, and Mr. U——described, very amusingly,
that when he was awakened by the noise which the cage made against a wire
fence (which it just "topped" in passing), he sprang out of his bed in the
attic, and clambered out of the window, expecting to find the very heavy
sort of staircase-ladder in its place; but it was "over the hills and far
away," so he had a drop of about twelve feet to the ground, which
thoroughly aroused him. He went into the verandah to see if the cage was
safe, and was nearly knocked down by a big tin bath, ordinarily kept
there, which was just starting across country. As soon as he missed the
cage he very pluckily went after it, being able to keep sight of it by the
fitful gleams of moon-light, and he was just in time to rescue the poor
little surviving canary. We could not help laughing at the recital of all
the mischief which had been done, but still it is very tiresome, and the
garden looks, if possible, more wretched than ever. There is no shelter
for it yet, and my poor green-peas are blown nearly out of the ground. It
rained hard all the evening, so our congregation was confined to the home
party.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XIV: A Christmas picnic, and other doings. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, December 1866. It is too late to wish you a merry Christmas
and a happy New Year in this letter. In order to allow them to reach you
in time I should have sent my good wishes in October's letter; I must
remember to do so next year. I am writing on the last days of the month,
so I shall be able to tell you of our own Christmas doings; though, first,
I must describe the festivities attending a "coming of age in the Bush,"
to which we were invited about the middle of this month. How strange
Christmas picnics and balls will appear in your eyes, before which still
dangle probably the dear old traditional holly and ivy! I am obliged to
preface all my descriptions with an account of a ride, if I am to begin,
according to your repeated injunctions, at the very beginning; for a ride
is quite certain to be both the beginning and end of each excursion,
simply because we have no other means of going about, except on our feet.
The ride upon this occasion was to Rockwood, where the birthday party was
to assemble, but the road had not now so many terrors for me. In
consequence of the fine dry weather, most of the bad places were safer and
firmer, and the numerous creeks were only shallow sparkling streamlets
over which a child could jump, instead of the muddy noisy wide brooks of
three months ago. The day on which we started, this time, was a great
contrast to the former one. When we reached the saddle I have before told
you of, instead of being met and nearly driven back by a violent "sutherly
buster," we stopped before beginning the steep descent to admire the
exquisite view before us.</p>
<p>Close on our right hand rose the Government bush out of which we get our
firewood, standing grand and gloomy amid huge cliffs and crags; even the
summer sunshine could not enliven it, nor the twitter and chirrup of
countless birds. In front, the chain of hills we were crossing rolled down
in gradually decreasing hillocks, till they merged in the vast plains
before us, stretching away as far as the eye could reach towards the
south, all quivering in the haze and glare of the bright sunlight. The
background, extending along the horizon, was formed of lofty mountains
still glistening white against the dazzling blue sky. Just at our feet the
Rockwood paddocks looked like carpets of emerald velvet, spread out among
the yellowish tussocks; the fences which enclose them were either golden
with broom and gorse, or gay with wild roses and honeysuckle. Beyond these
we saw the bright patches of flowers in the garden, and nothing could be
more effective than the white gable of the house standing out against the
vast black birch forest which clothed the steep hill-sides for miles—the
contrast was so picturesque between the little bit of civilization and
culture and the great extent of wild, savage scenery around it. After the
utter treelessness of our own immediate neighbourhood, the sight of such a
mass of foliage is a joy to my eyes.</p>
<p>The day following our arrival was <i>the</i> birthday, and we prepared to
enjoy every hour of it. The party assembled was a very large one,
consisting, however, chiefly of gentlemen, for the utmost exertions in the
district could not produce more than five ladies altogether, and two of
those had come an immense way. Directly after breakfast we all sallied
forth, the ladies equipped in light cotton dresses (muslin is too thin for
the bush) and little sailor hats,—we did not want shady ones, for
never a gleam of sun can penetrate into a real New Zealand Bush, unless in
a spot which has been very much cleared. Strong boots with nails in the
soles, to help us to keep on our feet up the steep clay hill-sides, and a
stout stick, completed our equipment; perhaps we were not very smart, but
we looked like going at all events. I can answer for myself that I enjoyed
every moment of that long Midsummer holiday most intensely, though I fear
I must have wearied our dear, charming host, by my incessant questions
about the names of the trees and shrubs, and of the habits and ways of the
thousands of birds. It was all so new and so delightful to me,—the
green gloom, the hoarse croak of the ka-ka, as it alighted almost at our
feet and prepared, quite careless of our vicinity, to tear up the loose
soil at the root of a tall tree, in search of grubs. It is a species of
parrot, but with very dingy reddish-brown plumage, only slightly enlivened
by a few, scarlet feathers in the wing. The air was gay with bright green
parroquets flitting about, very mischievous they are, I am told, taking
large tithe of the fruit, especially of the cherries. Every now and then
we stood, by common consent, silent and almost breathless to listen to the
Bell-bird, a dingy little fellow, nearly as large as a thrush with the
plumage of a chaffinch, but with such a note!—how can I make you
hear its wild, sweet, plaintive tone, as a little girl of the party said,
"just as if it had a bell in its throat;" but indeed it would require a
whole peal of silver bells to ring such an exquisite chime. Then we crept
softly up to a low branch, to have a good look at the Tui, or Parson-bird,
most respectable and clerical-looking in its glossy black suit, with a
singularly trim and dapper air, and white wattles of very slender feathers—indeed
they are as fine as hair-curled coquettishly at each side of his throat,
exactly like bands. All the birds were quite tame, and, instead of
avoiding us, seemed inclined to examine us minutely. Many of them have
English names, which I found very tantalising, especially when, the New
Zealand Robin was announced, and I could only see a fat little ball of a
bird, with a yellowish-white breast. Animals there are none. No quadruped
is indigenous to New Zealand, except a rat; but then, on the other hand,
we are as free from snakes and all vermin as if St. Patrick himself had
lived here. Our host has turned several pheasants into this forest, but
they increase very slowly on account of the wekas. However, the happiness
of this morning was made complete by our putting up two splendid
rocketers.</p>
<p>We could only make our way by the paths which have been cut through the
Bush; a yard off the track it is impossible to stir for the dense
undergrowth. In the ravines and steep gullies formed by the creeks grow
masses of ferns of all sorts, spreading like large shrubs, and contrasting
by their light bright green with the black stems of the birch-trees around
them. There are a few pines in this bush, but not many. I can give you no
idea of the variety among the shrubs: the koromika, like an Alpine rose, a
compact ball of foliage; the lance-wood, a tall, slender stem, straight as
a line, with a few long leaves at the top, turned downwards like the barb
of a spear, and looking exactly like a lance stuck into the ground; the
varieties of matapo, a beautiful shrub, each leaf a study, with its
delicate tracery of black veins on a yellow-green ground; the mappo, the
gohi, and many others, any of which would be the glory of an English
shrubbery: but they seem to require the deep shelter of their native Bush,
for they never flourish when transplanted. I noticed the slender the large
trees have of the ground, and it is not at all surprising, after such a
gale as we had three weeks ago, to see many of the finest blown down in
the clearings where the wind could reach them. They do not seem to have
any tap-root at all, merely a very insufficient network of fibres, seldom
of any size, which spreads a short way along the surface of the ground As
long as a Bush is undisturbed by civilization, it appears to be impervious
to wind or weather; but as soon as it is opened and cleared a little, it
begins to diminish rapidly. There are traces all over the hills of vast
forests having once existed; chiefly of totara, a sort of red pine, and
those about us are scattered with huge logs of this valuable wood, all
bearing traces of the action of fire; but shepherds, and explorers on
expeditions, looking for country, have gradually consumed them for fuel,
till not many pieces remain except on the highest and most inaccessible
ranges.</p>
<p>It was a delightful, and by no means unacceptable surprise which awaited
us on the other side, when, on emerging from a very thick part of the
Bush, we came on a lovely spot, a true "meeting of the waters." Three
broad, bright creeks came rushing and tumbling down from the densely
wooded hills about to join and flow on in quite a good-sized river, amid
boulders and a great deal of hurry and fuss,—a contrast to the
profound quiet of our ramble hitherto, the silence of which was only
broken by the twitter and whistle of the birds. Never a song can you hear,
only a sweet chirrup, or two or three melodious notes. On the opposite
bank of the river there was the welcome sight of several hampers more or
less unpacked, and the gleam of a white tablecloth on the moss.
Half-a-dozen gentlemen had formed themselves into a commissariat, and were
arranging luncheon. We could see the champagne cooling in a sort of little
bay, protected by a dam of big stones from being carried down the stream.
It all looked very charming and inviting, but the next question was how to
get across the river to these good things. Twelve or fourteen feet
separated us, hungry and tired wanderers as we were, from food and rest;
the only crossing-place was some miles lower down, near the house in fact;
so even the most timid amongst us scouted the idea of retracing our steps.
The only alternative was to make a bridge: one of the gentlemen who were
with us carried an axe in case of emergency, and in a moment we heard the
sharp ringing sounds foretelling the fall of a tree. In the mean-time,
others of the party were dragging out fallen logs—of course small
and manageable ones—and laying them from one huge boulder to
another, working up to their knees in water. So many of these prostrate
trunks were "convenient," that a cry soon arose to the woodman to "spare
the trees," for there were quite enough on the ground. However, two
substantial poles had been felled, and these were laid over the deepest
and most dangerous part of the current. The bridge was soon declared
passable, and loud shouts from the opposite side proclaimed that luncheon
was quite ready. I was called, as having a most undeserved reputation for
"pluck," to make trial of the aerial-looking fabric. I did not like it at
all, and entreated some one else to lead the forlorn hope; so a very quiet
young lady, who really possessed more courage in her little finger than I
do in my whole body, volunteered to go first. The effect from the bank was
something like tight-rope dancing, and it was very difficult to keep one's
balance. Miss Kate, our pioneer, walked on very steadily, amid great
applause, till she reached the middle of the stream, where fortunately the
water was shallow, but strewed with masses of boulders. She paused an
instant on the large rock on which the ends of the saplings rested, and
then started afresh for the last half of her journey. The instant she put
her foot on the second part of the bridge, it gave way with a loud crash;
and the poor girl, with great presence of mind, caught at the tree she,
had just crossed, and so saved herself from a ducking. Of course, she had
plenty of help in an instant, but the difficulty was to regain any sort of
footing. She could not drop into the water, and there was apparently no
way of dragging herself up again; but one of the gentlemen crept on hands
and knees along the unbroken part of the bridge, and eventually helped her
up the sides of the large boulder which acted as a pier, and from which
the log had slipped. From the other side they now pushed across tall, slim
trees, freshly cut, and the rest of the passage was safe enough. I did not
like the mode of transit at all, though I got over without a slip, but it
requires a steady head to cross a noisy stream on two slippery round poles—for
really the trees were little thicker—laid side by side, bending with
every step. It was a great comfort to me all luncheon-time to know that we
were not to return by the same path through the Bush. We had a good rest
after lunch: I lay back on a bed of fern, watching the numbers of little
birds around us; they boldly picked up our crumbs, without a thought of
possible danger. Presently I felt a tug at the shawl on which I was lying:
I was too lazy and dreamy to turn my head, so the next thing was a sharp
dig on my arm, which hurt me dreadfully. I looked round, and there was a
weka bent on thoroughly investigating the intruder into its domain. The
bird looked so cool and unconcerned, that I had not the heart to follow my
first impulse and throw my stick at it; but my forbearance was presently
rewarded by a stab on the ankle, which fairly made me jump up with a
scream, when my persecutor glided gracefully away among the bushes,
leaving me, like Lord Ullin, "lamenting."</p>
<p>We sauntered home slowly, gathering armfuls of, fern and a large variety
of a stag's-head moss so common on the west coast of Scotland; and as soon
as we had had some tea, the gentlemen went off with their towels to bathe
in the creek, and the five ladies set to work at the decorations for the
ball-room, weaving wreaths and arranging enormous bouquets very rapidly:
we had such a wealth of flowers to work with that our task was not
difficult. The most amusing part of the story is, however, that the ball
took place in my bed-room! A very pompous lady of my acquaintance always
prefaces the slenderest anecdote with these words, "And it happened in
this wise," so I think I shall avail myself of the <i>tour de phrase</i>.</p>
<p>It happened in this wise, then:-a large well-proportioned room had been
added to the house lately; it was intended for a drawing-room, but for
some reason has only been used as a spare bed-room, but as it may possibly
return to its original destination, very little bed-room furniture has
been put in it, and many of its belongings are appropriate to a
sitting-room. We called in the servants, the light cane bedstead was soon
deposited under the shade of a tree in the garden, the washing-stand was
similarly disposed of, and an hour's work with hammer and nails and a ball
of string turned the room into a perfect bower of ferns and flowers: great
ingenuity was displayed in the arrangement of lights, and the result was a
very pretty ball-room.</p>
<p>We are always eating in this country, so you will not be surprised to hear
that there was yet another meal to be disposed of before we separated to
dress in all sorts of nooks and corners. White muslin was the universal
costume, as it can be packed flat and smooth. My gown had been carried
over by F—— in front of his saddle in a very small parcel: I
covered it almost entirely with sprays of the light-green stag's-head,
moss, and made a wreath of it also for my hair. I think that with the
other ladies roses were the most popular decoration, and they looked very
fresh and nice. I was the universal <i>coiffeuse</i>, and I dressed all
the girls' heads with flowers, as I was supposed to be best up in the
latest fashions. In the meantime, the piano had been moved to the
bay-window of the ball-room, and at ten o'clock dancing commenced, and may
be truly said to have been kept up with great spirit until four o'clock:
it only ceased then on account of the state of exhaustion of the
unfortunate five ladies, who had been nearly killed with incessant
dancing. I threw a shawl over my head, and sauntered alone up one of the
many paths close to the house which led into the Bush. Tired as I was, I
shall never forget the beauty and romance of that hour,—the
delicious crisp <i>new</i> feeling of the morning air; the very roses,
growing like a red fringe on the skirts of the great Bush, seemed awaking
to fresh life and perfume; the numbers of gay lizards and flies coming out
for their morning meal, and, above all, the first awakening of the myriads
of Bush-birds; every conceivable twitter and chatter and chirrup; the last
cry of a very pretty little owl, called, from its distinctly uttered
words, the "More-pork," as it flitted away before the dawn to the highest
trees: all made up a jubilant uproar compared to which one of the Crystal
Palace choruses is silence. I sat down on a fallen tree, and listened and
waited: every moment added to the lovely dawn around me, and I enjoyed to
the full the fragrant smells and joyous sounds of another day in this
fresh young land.</p>
<p>All too soon came a loud "coo-ee" from the house, which I allowed them to
repeat before I answered; this was to tell me that the ball-room was
deserted, and had been again turned into a bed-room. When I opened my eyes
later, after a six hours' nap, the room looked like a fairy bower, the
flowers still unfaded. We had another picnic the next day up the gorge of
a river, amid very wild and beautiful scenery; but everything had been
arranged so as to make the expedition an easy one, out of consideration to
the weary five. The day after this we rode home again, and I had to set to
work directly to prepare for my own Christmas party to the shepherds and
shearers,—for we have just commenced to muster the sheep, and the
shearing will be in full force by Christmas Day. One great object I have
in view in giving this party is to prevent the shearers from going over to
the nearest accommodation-house and getting tipsy, as they otherwise
would; so I have taken care to issue my invitations early. I found great
difficulty in persuading some of the men to accept, as they had not
brought any tidy clothes with them; and as the others would be decently,
indeed well dressed, they did not like putting in a shabby appearance.
This difficulty was obviated by F—— hunting up some of the
things he had worn on the voyage, and rigging-out the invited guests. For
two days before the great day I had been working hard, studying recipes
for pies and puddings, and scouring the country in search of delicacies.
Every lady was most kind, knowing that our poor, exposed garden was
backward; I had sacks of green peas, bushels of young potatoes, and
baskets of strawberries and cherries sent to me from all round the
country; I made poor F—— ride twenty miles to get me a sirloin
of beef, and, to my great joy, two beautiful young geese arrived as a
present only the day before. It is a point of honour to have as little
mutton as possible on these occasions, as the great treat is the complete
change of fare. I only ventured to introduce it very much disguised as
curry, or in pies. We were all up at daylight on Christmas morning, and
off to the nearest little copse in one of the gullies, where a few shrubs
and small trees and ferns grow, to gather boughs for the decoration of the
washhouse. Marvels were done in the carpentering line to arrange tables
around its walls. The copper, which at first presented such an obstacle to
the symmetry of the adornments, became their chief glory; it was boarded
over, its sides completely hidden by flags and ferns, and the dessert
placed on it peeped out from a bower of greenery. I don't know how we got
our own breakfast; from eleven o'clock there was the constant announcement
"A horseman coming up the flat;" and by twelve, when I as beadle announced
that all was ready, a large congregation of thirty-six came trooping into
my little drawing-room. As soon as it was filled the others clustered
round the door; but all could hear, I think. F—— began the
service; and as the notes of the Christmas Anthem swelled up, I found the
tears trembling in my eyes. My overwhelming thought was that it actually
was the very first time those words had ever been sung or said in that
valley—you in England can hardly realize the immensity of such a
thought—"the first time since the world was made." I think the next
sensation was one of extreme happiness; it seemed such a privilege to be
allowed to hold the initial Christmas service. I had to grasp this idea
very tight to keep down the terrible home-sickness which I felt all day
for almost the first time. There are moments when no advantages or
privileges can repress what Aytoun calls "the deep, unutterable woe which
none save exiles feel."</p>
<p>The service only lasted half an hour, beginning and ending with a hymn;
there were three women present besides me—my two servants, and the
nice young wife of a neighbouring shepherd. It was a sultry day, not a
breath of air; but still it is never oppressive at this elevation. We
wound up a big musical-box, set it going in the banqueting-hall (late
washhouse), and marshalled the guests in they were extremely shy as a
rule, and so we soon went away and left them to themselves. They ate
incessantly for two hours—and I hope they enjoyed themselves; then
the men lounged about the stables and smoked, and the three women cleared
away a little. F—— and our gentlemen guests got up athletic
sports in the shade which seemed very popular, though it appeared a great
deal of trouble to take on such a hot day. As the sun sank below the hills
it grew much cooler, and my two maids came with a shamefaced request to be
allowed to dance in the kitchen. I inquired about the music?—that
was provided for by a fiddle and some pipes; so I consented, but I found
they wanted me to start them. I selected as my partner a very decent young
farmer who lives near, but has left his farm and is at work branding our
sheep all shearing-time. The pride and delight of his mate was much
greater than my partner's; he stood near his friend, prompting him through
the mazes of the most extraordinary quadrille you ever saw, with two extra
figures. Then there was an endless polka, in which everybody danced, like
Queen Elizabeth, "high and disposedly;" but the ball ended at nine
o'clock, and we were given some cold dinner, for which we were all very
ready. The next morning saw the remains of the festivity cleared away, and
every one hard at work again; for this is our very busiest season. The
work of the station, however, is carried on at the homestead two miles
off. F—— is there all day long, but I see nothing of it. While
the shearers' hearts were tender, I asked them to come over to church on
Sunday, and they have promised to do so: I lend them quantities of books
and papers also, so as to keep them amused and away from the
accommodation-house.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XV: Everyday station life. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, January 1867. You tell me to describe our daily home-life and
domestic surroundings. I dare say it: will appear to be a monotonous and
insignificant existence enough when put on paper, but it suits me exactly;
and, for the first time in my life, I have enough to do, and also the
satisfaction of feeling that I am of some little use to my
fellow-creatures. A lady's influence out here appears to be very great,
and capable of indefinite expansion. She represents refinement and culture
(in Mr. Arnold's sense of the words), and her footsteps on a new soil such
as this should be marked by a trail of light. Of course every improvement
must be the work of time, but I find my neighbours very willing to help me
in my attempts.</p>
<p>A few lines will be sufficient to sketch a day's routine. The first of my
duties is one I especially delight in. I am out very early with a large
tin dish of scraps mixed with a few handfuls of wheat, and my appearance
is the signal for a great commotion among all my fowls and ducks and
pigeons. Such waddling and flying and running with outstretched wings to
me: in fact, I receive a morning greeting from all the live-stock about
the place. I am nearly knocked down by the big sheep-dogs; the calves come
rushing with awkward gambols towards me for a bit of the fowls' bread,
whilst the dogs look out for a bone; but, in the midst of the confusion,
the poultry hold their own; indeed, an anxious hen eager to secure a
breakfast for her chicks will fly at a big dog, and beat him away from a
savoury morsel. I think I ought not to omit mentioning the devotion of a
small pig; it is an exact illustration of the French proverb which speaks
of the inequality of love, for I am quite passive and do not respond in
the least to the little beastie's affection, which is the most absurd
thing you ever saw, especially as it proceeds from so unromantic an
animal. Late in the spring (that is to say, about November last) we were
all returning from a great pig-hunting expedition, when I saw one of the
party coming down a steep hill near the house with a small and
glossy-black wild pig under each arm; he was very proud of his captives,
placed them in a box with some straw, and fed them like babies out of a
bottle. We laughed at him very much; but when he went away he begged so
earnestly that the pigs should be reared that we promised to keep them. In
a few days they became perfectly tame, and were very handsome little
creatures; and one of them attached itself to me, following me all about,
even into the house (but <i>that</i> I really could not stand),
accompanying me in all my walks, and, as far as it could, in my rides.
Many a time have I seen poor little piggy carried down a creek by the
current, squealing piteously, but it was evidently a case of "many waters
cannot quench love," for a little further on piggy would appear, very much
baked, but holding out gallantly, till sheer exhaustion compelled him to
give in, when he would lie down under a tussock, apparently dying; but, as
we were coming home in the dusk, Helen, my pretty bay mare, has given many
a shy at piggy starting up from his shelter with gambols and squeals of
joy.</p>
<p>It is always a great temptation to loiter about in the lovely fresh
morning air, but I have to be dressed in time for prayers and breakfast at
nine; directly after breakfast I go into the kitchen; sometimes, it is
only necessary to give orders or instructions, but generally I find that
practice is much better than precept, and I see to the soup myself, and
make the pudding—the joint can take care of itself.</p>
<p>You have often asked me what we have to eat, so this will be a good
opportunity of introducing our daily bill of fare, prefacing it with my
recorded opinion that here is no place in the world where you can live so
cheaply and so well as on a New Zealand sheep station, when once you get a
start. Of course, it is expensive at first, setting everything going, but
that would be the case in any country. I will begin at the very beginning:—Porridge
for breakfast, with new milk and cream <i>a discretion</i>; to follow—mutton
chops, mutton ham, or mutton curry, or broiled mutton and mushrooms, not
shabby little fragments of meat broiled, but beautiful tender steaks off a
leg; tea or coffee, and bread and butter, with as many new-laid eggs as we
choose to consume. Then, for dinner, at half-past one, we have soup, a
joint, vegetables, and a pudding; in summer, we have fresh fruit stewed,
instead of a pudding, with whipped cream. I was a proud and happy woman
the first day my cream remained cream, and did not turn into butter; for
generally my zeal outran my discretion, and I did not know when to leave
off whipping. We have supper about seven; but this is a moveable feast,
consisting of tea again, mutton cooked in some form of entree, eggs, bread
and butter, and a cake of my manufacture. I must, however, acknowledge,
that at almost every other station you would get more dainties, such as
jam and preserves of all sorts, than we can boast of yet; for, as Littimer
says to David Copperfield, "We are very young, exceedingly young, sir,"
our fruit-trees, have not come into full bearing, and our other resources
are still quite undeveloped.</p>
<p>However, I have wandered away terribly from my first intention of telling
you of the daily occupations to a description of our daily food. After I
have finished all my little fussings about the house, I join F——
who has probably been for some time quietly settled down at his
writing-table, and we work together at books and writing till dinner;
after that meal, F—— like Mr. Tootes, "resumes his studies,"
but I go and feed my fowls again, and if I am very idly disposed I sit on
a hencoop in the shade and watch the various tempers of my chickens and
ducklings. A little later F—— and I go out for some hours: if
it is not too hot, he takes his rifle and we go over the hills
pig-stalking, but this is really only suitable exercise for a fine
winter's day; at this time of year we either go for a walk or a ride,
generally the latter—not a little shabby canter, but a long
stretching gallop for miles and miles; perhaps stopping to have a cup of
tea with a neighbour twelve or fifteen miles off, and then coming slowly
home in the delicious gloaming, with the peculiar fresh crisp feeling
which the atmosphere always has here the moment the sun sets, no matter
how hot the day has been. I can hardly hope to make you understand how
enjoyable our twilight hours are, with no fear of damp or malaria to spoil
them; every turn of the track as we slowly wind up the valley showing us
some beautiful glimpse of distant mountain peaks, and, above all, such
sunset splendours, gradually fading away into the deep, pure beauty of a
summer night.</p>
<p>In one of our rides the other day, after crossing a low range of hills, we
suddenly dropped down on what would be called in England a hamlet, but
here it is designated by the extraordinary name of a "nest of cockatoos."
This expression puzzled me so much when I first heard it, that I must give
you as minute an explanation as I myself found necessary to the
comprehension of the subject.</p>
<p>When a shepherd has saved a hundred pounds, or the better class of
immigrant arrives with a little capital, the favourite investment is in
freehold land, which they can purchase, in sections of twenty acres and
upwards, at 2 pounds the acre. The next step is to build a sod but with
two rooms on their property, thatching it with Tohi, or swamp grass; a
door and a couple of window-frames all ready glazed are brought from
Christchurch in the dray with the family and the household goods. After
this rough and ready shelter is provided, the father and sons begin
fencing their land and gradually it all assumes a cultivated appearance.
Pig-sties and fowl-houses are added; a little garden, gay with common
English flowers, is made in front of the house, whose ugly walls are
gradually hidden by creepers, and the homestead looks both picturesque and
prosperous. These small farmers are called Cockatoos in Australia by the
squatters or sheep-farmers, who dislike them for buying up the best bits
of land on their runs; and say that, like a cockatoo, the small freeholder
alights on good ground, extracts all he can from it, and then flies away
to "fresh fields and pastures new." But the real fact is, that the poor
farmer perhaps finds his section is too far from a market, so he is forced
to abandon it and move nearer a town, where the best and most productive
land has been bought up already; and he has to begin again at a
disadvantage. However, whether the name is just or not, it is a recognized
one here; and I have heard a man say in answer to a question about his
usual occupation, "I'm a Cockatoo."</p>
<p>This particular "nest" appeared to me very well off, comparatively
speaking; for though the men complained sadly of the low price of their
wheat and oats, still there was nothing like poverty to be seen. Ready
money was doubtless scarce, and an extensive system of barter appeared to
prevail; but still they all looked well fed and well clothed; sickness was
unknown among them, and it did one's heart good to see the children—such
sturdy limbs, bright fearless eyes, and glowing faces. They have abundance
of excellent food. Each cottager has one or two cows, and the little ones
take these out to pasture on the hills, so they are in the open air nearly
all day: but their ignorance is appalling! Many of them had never even
been christened; there was no school or church within thirty miles or
more, and although the parents seemed all tidy, decent people, and
deplored the state of things, they were powerless to help it. The father
and elder sons work hard all day; the mother has to do everything, even to
making the candles, for the family; there is no time or possibility of
teaching the children. The neighbouring squatters do not like to encourage
settlers to buy up their land, therefore they carefully avoid making
things pleasant for a new "nest," and the Cockatoos are "nobody's
business;" so, as far as educational advantages go, they are perfectly
destitute.</p>
<p>When I mentioned my discovery of this hamlet, and my dismay at the state
of neglect in which so many fine intelligent-looking children were growing
up, every one warned me not to interfere, assuring me the Cockatoo was a
very independent bird, that he considered he had left all the Ladies
Bountiful and blanket and coal charities behind him in the old country;
that, in short, as it is generally put, "Jack is as good as his master"
out here, and any attempt at patronage would be deeply resented. But I
determined to try the effect of a little visiting among the cottages, and
was most agreeably surprised at the kind and cordial welcome I received.
The women liked to have some one to chat to about their domestic affairs,
and were most hospitable in offers of tea, etc., and everywhere
invitations to "come again" were given; so the next week I ventured to
invite the men over to our Sunday services. Those who were fond of reading
eagerly accepted the offer to join the book-club, and at last we started
the educational subject. Many plans were discussed, and finally we
arranged for one woman, who had received an excellent education and was
quite fitted for the post, to commence a day-school; but this entailed so
much loss of her valuable time that the terms she is obliged to ask seem
disproportionately high to the people's means. She wants 2 shillings and 6
pence a week with each child, and this is terrible heavy on the head of a
family who is anxious and willing to give them some "schooling." However,
the plan is to be tried, and I have promised to start them with books,
slates, copybooks, etc. It was quite touching to hear their earnest
entreaties that F—— would come over on Sunday sometimes and
hold a service there, but I tried to show them this could not be managed.
The tears actually came into their eyes when I talked of the happiness it
would be to see a little church and school in their midst; and the almost
invariable remark was, "Ah, but it'll be a far day first." And so I fear
it will—a very far day; but I have often heard it said, that if you
propose one definite object to yourself as the serious purpose of your
life, you will accomplish it some day. Well, the purpose of my life
henceforward is to raise money somehow or somewhere to build a little
wooden school-room (licensed for service, to be held whenever a missionary
clergyman comes by), and to pay the salary of a schoolmaster and mistress,
so that the poor Cockatoo need not be charged more than threepence a week
for each child. The Board of Education will give a third of the sum
required, when two-thirds have been already raised; but it is difficult to
collect subscriptions, or indeed to induce the squatters to listen to any
plan for improving the condition of the small farmers, and every year
which slips away and leaves these swarms of children in ignorance adds to
the difficulty of training them. [Note: Since this was written, a
school-house, also used as a church, has been built in this district by
private subscription and Government aid. A clergyman, who lives some
twenty-five miles away, rides over and holds service once a month.]</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XVI: A sailing excursion on Lake Coleridge. </h2>
<p>Lake Coleridge, February 1867. A violent storm of wind and rain from the
south-west keeps us all indoors to-day, and gives me time to write my
letter for the Panama mail, which will be made up to-morrow. The
post-office is ten miles off, and rejoices in the appropriate name of
"Wind-whistle;" it stands at the mouth of a deep mountain gorge, and there
never was such a temple of the winds.</p>
<p>This bad weather comes after a long spell of lovely bright summer days,
and is very welcome to fill up the failing creeks in the lower ranges of
hills. I must tell you how much we have been enjoying our visit here. F——
knows this part of the country well, but it is quite new to me, and a
great contrast to the other scenery I have described to you We had long
talked of paying Mr. C. H—— a visit at his bachelor cottage on
his station far back among the high ranges of hills, but no time was
fixed, so I was rather taken by surprise when last week he drove up to
Broomielaw in a light American waggon with a pair of stout horses, and
announced that he had come to take us to his place next day. There was no
reason against this plan, and we agreed at once; the next morning saw us
on the road, after an early breakfast. We had to drive about thirty-five
miles round, whereas it would have been only twenty miles riding across
the hills; but our kind host thought that it would be much more
comfortable for me to be able to take a carpet-bag in the carriage instead
of the usual system of saddle-bags one is obliged to adopt travelling on
horseback. We made our first stage at the ever-hospitable station of the C——'s,
on the Horarata, but we could not remain to luncheon, as they wished,
having to push on further; and, as it turned out, it was most fortunate we
took advantage of the first part of the day to get over the ground between
us and our destination, for the gentle breeze which had been blowing since
we started gradually freshened into a tremendous "nor'-wester," right in
our teeth all the rest of our way. The poor horses bent their heads as low
as possible and pulled bravely at their collars, up hill the whole time.
Among the mountains the wind rushed with redoubled fury down the narrow
gorges, and became icily cold as we neared the snowy ranges. It was
impossible to see the hills for the thick mist, though I knew we must have
a magnificent view before us. We took refuge for an hour just to rest the
horses, at Windwhistle, and I certainly expected the house to come down
whilst we were there. I can hardly tell you anything of the rest of the
drive, for I was really frightened at my first experience of a "howling
nor'-wester" out of doors, and Mr. H—— made me sit down at the
bottom of the carriage and heaped over me all the cloaks and shawls we had
brought. It was delightful to find ourselves under shelter at last in a
pretty bright snug room, with lots of books and arm-chairs, and a blazing
fire; <i>this</i>, you must remember, in midsummer.</p>
<p>The next morning was perfectly calm, and the lake as serene as if no storm
had been dashing its water in huge breakers against the beach only a few
hours before. The view from the sitting-room was lovely: just beneath the
window there was a little lawn, as green as possible from the spray with
which the lake had washed it yesterday; beyond this a low hedge, an open
meadow, a fringe of white pebbly beach, and then a wide expanse of water
within one little wooded island, and shut in gradually from our view by
spurs of hills running down to the shore, sometimes in bold steep cliffs,
and again in gentle declivities, with little strips of bush or scrub
growing in the steep gullies between them. The lake extends some way
beyond where we lose sight of it, being twelve miles long and four miles
broad. A few yards from the beach it is over six hundred feet deep.
Nothing but a painting could give you any idea of the blue of sky and
water that morning; the violent wind of yesterday seemed to have blown
every cloud below the horizon, for I could not see the least white film
anywhere. Behind the lower hills which surround the lake rises a splendid
snowy range; altogether, you cannot imagine a more enchanting prospect
than the one I stood and looked at; it made me think of Miss Procter's
lines—</p>
<p>"My eyes grow dim,<br/>
As still I gaze and gaze<br/>
Upon that mountain pass,<br/>
That leads—or so it seems— To some far happy land<br/>
Known in a world of dreams."<br/></p>
<p>All this time, whilst I was looking out of the window in most unusual
idleness, Mr. H—— and F—— were making constant
journeys between the boat-house and the store-room, and at last I was
entreated to go and put on my hat. While doing this I heard cupboards
being opened, and a great bustle; so when I reached the shore I was not so
much surprised as they expected, to see in the pretty little sailing-boat
(which was moored to a primitive sort of jetty made out of a broken old
punt) the materials for at least two substantial meals, in case of being
kept out by a sudden head-wind. I was especially glad to notice a little
kettle among the <i>impedimenta</i>, and there were cloaks and wraps of
all kinds to provide against the worst. Four gentlemen and I made up the
crew and passengers, and a very merry set we were, behaving extremely like
children out for a holiday. The wind was a trifle light for sailing, so
the gentlemen pulled, but very lazily and not at all in good "form," as
the object of each oarsman seemed to be to do as little work as possible.
However, we got on somehow, a light puff helping us now and then, but our
progress was hardly perceptible. I had been for a long time gazing down
into the clear blue depth of water, every now and then seeing a flash of
the white sand shining at the bottom, when I was half startled by our host
standing suddenly up in the bow of the boat; and then I found that we were
a couple of miles away from our starting-point, and that we had turned a
corner formed by a steep spur, and were running right into what appeared a
grove of rata-trees growing at the water's edge. The rata only grows in
the hills and near water; it is a species of broad-leaf myrtle, with a
flower exactly like a myrtle in character, but of a brilliant deep scarlet
colour, and twice as large.</p>
<p>When the bowsprit touched the rata-branches, which drooped like a curtain
into the water, Mr. H—— made a signal to lower the mast, and
parting the thick, blossom-covered foliage before us, with both hands, the
way the boat had on her sent us gently through the screen of scarlet
flowers and glossy green leaves into such a lovely fairy cove! Before us
was a little white beach of fine sparkling sand, against which the water
broke in tiny wavelets, and all around a perfect bower of every variety of
fern and moss, kept green by streams no thicker than a silver thread
trickling down here and there with a subdued tinkling sound. We all sat
quite silent, the boat kept back just inside the entrance by the steersman
holding on to a branch. It was a sudden contrast from the sparkling
sunshine and brightness outside, all life and colour and warmth, to the
tender, green, profound shade and quiet in this "Mossy Hum," as the people
about here call it. Do not fancy anything damp or chilly. No; it was like
a natural temple—perfect repose and refreshment to the eyes dazzled
with the brilliant outside colouring. Centuries ago there must have been a
great landslip here, for the side of the mountain is quite hollowed out,
and Nature has gradually covered the ugly brown rent with the thickest
tapestry of her most delicate handiwork. I noticed two varieties of the
maiden-hair, its slender black stem making the most exquisite tracery
among the vivid greens. There was no tint of colour except green when once
we passed the red-fringed curtain of rata-branches, only the white and
shining fairy beach and the gleaming threads of water. As we sat there,
perfectly still, and entranced, a sort of delicious mesmeric feeling stole
over me; I thought of the lotus-eater's chant, "There is no joy but calm,"
with, for, the first time in my life, a dim perception of what they meant,
perhaps; but it was over all too quickly: prosaic words of direction to
back water called us from shade to light, and in a moment more we were in
front of the rata-trees, admiring their splendid colouring, and our little
boat was dancing away over the bright waves, with her white wings set and
her bows pointed towards the little toy island in the middle of the lake;
it was no question now of rowing, a nice fresh breeze from the south (the
<i>cold</i> point here) sent us swiftly and steadily through the water.
What a morning it was! The air was positively intoxicating, making you
feel that the mere fact of being a living creature with lungs to inhale
such an atmosphere was a great boon. We have a good deal of disagreeable
weather, and a small proportion of bad weather, but in no other part of
the world, I believe, does Nature so thoroughly understand how to make a
fine day as in New Zealand.</p>
<p>A little after mid-day we ran our boat to the lee of the island, and:
whilst she was steadied by the same primitive method of holding on to
branches of manuka and other scrub, I scrambled out and up a little cliff,
where a goat could hardly have found footing, till I reached a spot big
enough to stand on, from whence I anxiously watched the disembarkation of
some of the provisions, and of the gridiron and kettle. In a few moments
we were all safely ashore, and busy collecting dry fern and brushwood for
a fire; it was rather a trial of patience to wait till the great blaze had
subsided before we attempted to cook our chops, which were all neatly
prepared ready for us. Some large potatoes were put to bake in the ashes;
the tin plates were warmed (it is a great art not to overheat them when
you have to keep them on your lap whilst you eat your chop). We were all
so terribly hungry that we were obliged to have a course of bread and
cheese and sardines <i>first</i>; it was really quite impossible to wait
patiently for the chops. The officiating cook scolded us well for our
Vandalism, and the next moment we detected him in the act of devouring a
half-raw potato. The fragments of our meal must have been a great boon to
the colony of wekas who inhabit the island, for as they increase and
multiply prodigiously their provisions must often fall short in so small a
space. No one can imagine how these birds originally came here, for the
island is at least two miles from the nearest point of land; they can
neither swim nor fly; and as every man's hand is against them, no one
would have thought it worth while to bring them over: but here they are,
in spite of all the apparent impossibilities attending their arrival, more
tame and impudent than ever. It was dangerous to leave your bread
unwatched for an instant, and indeed I saw one gliding off with an empty
sardine tin in its beak; I wonder how it liked oil and little scales. They
considered a cork a great prize, and carried several off triumphantly.</p>
<p>After luncheon there was the usual interval of rest, and pipes on the part
of the gentlemen. I explored a little, but there is nothing very pretty or
abundant in the way of wild flowers in the parts of New Zealand which I
have seen. White violets and a ground clematis are the only ones I have
come across in any quantity. The manuka, a sort of scrub, has a pretty
blossom like a diminutive Michaelmas daisy, white petals and a brown
centre, with a very aromatic odour; and this little flower is succeeded by
a berry with the same strong smell and taste of spice. The shepherds
sometimes make an infusion of these when they are very hard-up for tea;
but it must be like drinking a decoction of cloves.</p>
<p>About three o'clock we re-embarked, and sailed a little higher up the lake
beyond the point where we lose sight of it from Mr. H——'s
house, every moment opening out fresh and more beautiful glimpses. Quite
the opposite end of the shore is fringed with a thick deep forest, and
another station has been built there, at which, I am told, the scenery is
still more magnificent. At first I was inclined to wonder where the sheep
live amid all this picturesque but mountainous country: however, I find
that between and among these hills stretch immense valleys (or "flats," as
they are called here), which are warm and sheltered in winter, and afford
plenty of food for them; then, in summer, they go up to the mountains: but
it is very difficult to "muster" these ranges. I am almost ashamed to
confess to another meal before we returned home, but there was a lovely
tempting spot in a little harbour, and so we landed and boiled some water
and had a capital cup of tea. You require to be out as we were from
morning till night in such an air as this to know what it is to feel
either hungry or sleepy in perfection! The next day we made a similar
excursion, exploring the opposite shore of the lake; but, before we
started, our host distrusted the appearance of certain clouds, and sent
round horses to meet us at the point where we were going to lunch; and it
was just as well he did so, for a stiff breeze sprang up from the
south-west, which would have kept us out all night. So we mounted the
horses instead of re-embarking, having first secured the boat, and
cantered home. We passed several smaller lakes; there is a perfect chain
of them among these hills, and I was much amused at the names bestowed on
them, according to the tastes or caprice of the station-owners whose runs
happen to include them: for instance, two are called respectively
"Geraldine" and "Ida," whilst three, which lie close together, rejoice in
the somewhat extraordinary names of "the World," "the Flesh," and "the
Devil."</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XVII: My first and last experience of "camping out." </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, April 1867. I have nothing to tell you this mail, except of a
rather ridiculous expedition which we made last week, and which involved
our spending the whole night on the top of the highest hill on our run.
You will probably wonder what put such an idea into our heads, so I must
preface my account by a little explanation. Whenever I meet any people who
came here in the very early days of the colony—only sixteen years
ago, after all!—I delight in persuading them to tell me about their
adventures and hardships during those primitive times, and these
narratives have the greatest fascination for me, as they always end
happily. No one ever seems to have died of his miseries, or even to have
suffered seriously in any way from them, so I find the greatest delight in
listening to the stories of the Pilgrims. I envy them dreadfully for
having gone through so much with such spirit and cheerfulness, and ever
since I came here I have regretted that the rapid advance of civilization
in New Zealand precludes the possibility of being really uncomfortable;
this makes me feel like an impostor, for I am convinced that my English
friends think of me with the deepest pity, as of one cut off from the
refinements and comforts of life, whereas I really am surrounded by every
necessary, and many of its luxuries, and there is no reason but that of
expense why one should not have all of these.</p>
<p>One class of narratives is peculiarly attractive to me. I like to hear of
benighted or belated travellers when they have had to "camp out," as it is
technically called; and have lived in constant hope of meeting with an
adventure which would give me a similar experience. But I am gradually
becoming convinced that this is almost impossible by fair means, so I have
been trying for some time past to excite in the breasts of our home party
and of our nearest neighbours an ardent desire to see the sun rise from
the top of "Flagpole," a hill 3,000 feet above the level of the sea, and
only a: couple of miles from the house. As soon as they were sufficiently
enthusiastic on the subject, I broached my favourite project of our all
going up there over-night, and camping out on the highest peak. Strange to
say, the plan did not meet with any opposition, even from F——,
who has had to camp out many a winter's night, and with whom, therefore,
the novelty may be said to have worn off. Two gentlemen of the proposed
party were "new chums" like myself, and were strongly in favour of a
little roughing; new-chums always are, I observe. F——
hesitated a little about giving a final consent on the score of its being
rather too late in the year, and talked of a postponement till next
summer, but we would not listen to such an idea; so he ended by entering
so heartily into it, that when at last the happy day and hour came, an
untoward shower had not the least effect in discouraging him.</p>
<p>There was a great bustle about the little homestead on that eventful
Tuesday afternoon. Two very steady old horses were saddled, one for me and
the other for one of the "new chums," who was not supposed to be in good
form for a long walk, owing to a weak knee. Everything which we thought we
could possibly want was heaped on and around us after we had mounted; the
rest of the gentlemen, four in number, walked, and we reached the first
stage of our expedition in about an hour. Here we dismounted, as the
horses could go no further in safety. The first thing done was to see to
their comfort and security; the saddles were carefully deposited under a
large flax-bush in case of rain, and the long tether ropes were arranged
so as to ensure plenty of good feed and water for both horses, without the
possibility of the ropes becoming entangled in each other or in anything
else. Then came a time of great excitement and laughing and talking, for
all the "swags" had to be packed and apportioned for the very long and
steep ascent before us.</p>
<p>And now I must tell you exactly what we took up. A pair of large double
blankets to make the tent of,—that was one swag, and a very unwieldy
one it was, strapped knapsack fashion, with straps of flax-leaves, on the
back, and the bearer's coat and waistcoat fastened on the top of the
whole. The next load consisted of one small single blanket for my sole
use, inside of which was packed a cold leg of lamb. I carried the luncheon
basket, also strapped on my shoulders, filled with two large bottles of
cream, some tea and sugar, and, I think, teaspoons. It looked a very
insignificant load by the side of the others, but I assure you I found it
frightfully heavy long before I had gone half-way up the hill. The rest
distributed among them a couple of large heavy axes, a small coil of rope,
some bread, a cake, tin plates and pannikins, knives and forks, and a fine
pigeon-pie. Concerning this pie there were two abominable propositions;
one was to leave it behind, and the other was to eat it then and there:
both of these suggestions were, however, indignantly rejected. I must not
forget to say we included in the commissariat department two bottles of
whisky, and a tiny bottle of essence of lemon, for the manufacture of
toddy. We never see a real lemon, except two or three times a year when a
ship arrives from the Fiji islands, and then they are sixpence or a
shilling apiece. All these things were divided into two large heavy
"swags," and to poor F—— was assigned the heaviest and most
difficult load of all—the water. He must have suffered great anxiety
all the way, for if any accident had happened to his load, he would have
had to go back again to refill his big kettle; this he carried in his
hand, whilst a large tin vessel with a screw lid over its mouth was
strapped on his back also full of water, but he was particularly charged
not to let a drop escape from the spout of the kettle; and I may mention
here, that though he took a long time about it, for he could not go as
straight up the hill as we did, he reached the top with the kettle full to
the brim—the other vessel was of course quite safe. All these
packings and repackings, and the comfortable adjustment of the "swags,"
occupied a long time, so it was past five when we began our climb, and
half-past six when we reached the top of the hill, and getting so rapidly
dark that we had to hurry our preparations for the night, though we were
all so breathless that a "spell" (do you know that means <i>rest</i>?)
would have been most acceptable. The ascent was very steep, and there were
no sheep-tracks to guide us; our way lay through thick high flax-bushes,
and we never could have got on without their help. I started with a stick,
but soon threw it aside and pulled myself up by the flax, hand over hand.
Of course I had to stop every now and then to rest, and once I chose the
same flax-bush where three young wild pigs had retired for the night,
having first made themselves the most beautiful bed of tussock grass
bitten into short lengths; the tussocks are very much scattered here, so
it must have been an afternoon's work for them; but the shepherds say
these wild pigs make themselves a fresh bed every night.</p>
<p>The first thing to be done was to pitch the tent on the little flat at the
very top of the hill: it was a very primitive affair; two of the thinnest
and longest pieces of totara, with which Flagpole is strewed, we used for
poles, fastening another piece lengthwise to these upright sticks as a
roof-tree: this frame was then covered with the large double blanket,
whose ends were kept down on the ground by a row of the heaviest stones to
be found. The rope we had brought up served to tie the poles together at
the top, and to fasten the blanket on them; but as soon as the tent had
reached this stage, it was discovered that the wind blew through it from
end to end, and that it afforded very little protection. We also found it
much colder at the top of this hill than in our valley; so under these
circumstances it became necessary to appropriate my solitary blanket to
block up one end of the tent and make it more comfortable for the whole
party. It was very little shelter before this was done. The next step was
to collect wood for a fire, which was not difficult, for at some distant
time the whole of the hill must have been covered by a forest of totara
trees; it has apparently been destroyed by fire, for the huge trunks and
branches which still strew the steep sides are charred and half burnt. It
is a beautiful wood, with a strong aromatic odour, and blazed and crackled
splendidly in the clear, cool evening air, as we piled up a huge bonfire,
and put the kettle on to boil. It was quite dusk by this time, so the
gentlemen worked hard at collecting a great supply of wood, as the night
promised to be a very cold one, whilst I remained to watch the kettle,
full of that precious liquid poor F—— had carried up with such
care, and to prevent the wekas from carrying off our supper, which I had
arranged just inside the tent. In this latter task I was nobly assisted by
my little black terrier Dick, of whose sad fate I must tell you later.</p>
<p>By eight o'clock a noble pile of firewood had been collected, and we were
very tired and hungry; so we all crept inside the tent, which did not
afford very spacious accommodation, and began our supper. At this point of
the entertainment everybody voted it a great success; although the wind
was slowly rising and blowing from a cold point, and our blanket-tent did
not afford the perfect warmth and shelter we had fondly credited it with.
The gentlemen began to button up their coats. I had only a light serge
jacket on, so I coaxed Dick to sit at my back and keep it warm; for,
whilst our faces were roasted by the huge beacon-fire, there was a keen
and icy draught behind us. The hot tea was a great comfort, and we enjoyed
it thoroughly, and after it was over the gentlemen lit their pipes, and I
told them a story: presently we had glees, but by ten o'clock there was no
concealing the fact that we were all very sleepy indeed; however, we still
loudly declared that camping out was the most delightful experiment. F——
and another gentleman (that kind and most good-natured Mr. U——,
who lives with us) went outside the tent, armed with knives, and cut all
the tussocks they could feel in the darkness, to make me a bed after the
fashion of the pigs; they brought in several armfuls, and the warmest
corner in the tent was heaped with them; I had my luncheon-basket for a
pillow, and announced that I had turned in and was very comfortable, and
that camping out was charming; the gentlemen were still cheery, though
sleepy; and the last thing I remember was seeing preparations being made
for what a Frenchman of my acquaintance always will call a "grogs." When I
awoke, I thought I must have slept several hours. Though the fire was
blazing grandly, the cold was intense: I was so stiff I could hardly move;
all my limbs ached dreadfully, and my sensations altogether were new and
very disagreeable. I sat up with great difficulty and many groans, and
looked round: two figures were coiled up, like huge dogs, near me; two
more, moody and sulky, were smoking by the fire; with their knees drawn up
to their noses and their hands in their pockets, collars well up round
their throats—statues of cold and disgust. To my inquiries about the
hour, the answer, given in tones of the deepest despondency, was "Only
eleven o'clock, and the sun doesn't rise till six, and its going to be the
coldest night we've had this year." The speaker added, "If it wasn't so
dark that we'd break our necks on the way, we might go home."</p>
<p>Here was a pretty end to our amusement. I slowly let myself down again,
and tried to go to sleep, but that relief was at an end for the night; the
ground seemed to grow harder every moment, or, at all events, I ached
more, and the wind certainly blew higher and keener. Dick proved himself a
most selfish doggie; he would creep round to leeward of <i>me</i>, whilst
I wanted him to let me get leeward of him, but he would not consent to
this arrangement. Whenever I heard a deeper moan or sigh than usual, I
whispered an inquiry as to the hour, but the usual reply, in the most
cynical voice, was, "Oh, you need not whisper, nobody is asleep." I heard
one plaintive murmur "Think of all our warm beds, and of our coming up
here from choice." I must say I felt dreadfully ashamed of myself for my
plan; it was impossible to express my contrition and remorse, for, always
excepting Mr. U——, they were all too cross to be spoken to. It
certainly was a weary, long night. About one o'clock I pretended to want
some hot tea, and the preparation for that got through half an hour, and
it warmed us a little; but everybody still was deeply dejected, not to say
morose. After an interval of only two hours more of thorough and intense
wretchedness we had a "grogs," but there was no attempt at conviviality—subdued
savageness was the prevailing state of mind. I tried to infuse a little
hope into the party, by suggestions of a speedy termination to our misery,
but my own private opinion was that we should all be laid up for weeks to
come with illness. I allotted to myself in this imaginary distribution of
ills a severe rheumatic fever; oh! how I ached, and I felt as if I never
could be warm again. The fire was no use; except to afford occupation in
putting on wood; it roasted a little bit of you at a time, and that bit
suffered doubly from the cold when it was obliged to take its share of
exposure to the wind. I cannot say whether the proverb is true of other
nights, but this particular night, certainly, was both darkest and coldest
just before dawn.</p>
<p>At last, to our deep joy, and after many false alarms, we really all
agreed that there was a faint streak of grey in the east. My first impulse
was to set off home, and I believe I tried to get up expressing some such
intention, but F—— recalled me to myself by saying, in great
surprise, "Are you not going to stop and see the sun rise?" I had quite
forgotten that this was the avowed object of the expedition, but I was far
too stiff to walk a yard, so I was obliged to wait to see what effect the
sunrise would have on my frozen limbs, for I could not think of any higher
motive. Presently some one called out "There's the sea," and so it was, as
distinct as though it were not fifty miles off; none of us had seen it
since we landed; to all of us it is associated with the idea of going home
some day: whilst we were feasting our eyes on it a golden line seemed
drawn on its horizon; it spread and spread, and as all the water became
flooded with a light and glory which hardly seemed to belong to this
world, the blessed sun came up to restore us all to life and warmth again.
In a moment, in less than a moment, all our little privations and
sufferings vanished as if they had never existed, or existed only to be
laughed at. Who could think of their "Ego" in such a glorious presence,
and with such a panorama before them? I did not know which side to turn to
first. Behind me rose a giant forest in the far hills to the west—a
deep shadow for miles, till the dark outline of the pines stood out
against the dazzling snow of the mountains behind it; here the sky was
still sheltering the flying night, and the white outlines looked ghostly
against the dull neutral tints, though every peak was sharply and clearly
defined; then I turned round to see before me such a glow of light and
beauty! For an immense distance I could see the vast Canterbury plains; to
the left the Waimakiriri river, flowing in many streams, "like a tangled
bunch of silver ribbons" (as Mr. Butler calls it in his charming book on
New Zealand), down to the sea; beyond its banks the sun shone on the
windows of the houses at Oxford, thirty miles off as the crow would fly,
and threw its dense bush into strong relief against the yellow plains. The
Port Hills took the most lovely lights and shadows as we gazed on them;
beyond them lay the hills of Akaroa, beautiful beyond the power of words
to describe. Christchurch looked quite a large place from the great extent
of ground it appeared to cover. We looked onto the south: there was a
slight haze over the great Ellesmere Lake, the water of which is quite
fresh, though only separated from the sea by a slight bar of sand; the
high banks of the Rakaia made a deep dark line extending right back into
the mountains, and beyond it we could see the Rangitata faintly gleaming
in the distance; between us and the coast were green patches and tiny
homesteads, but still few and far between; close under our feet, and
looking like a thread beneath the shadow of the mountain, ran the Selwyn
in a narrow gorge, and on its bank stood the shepherd's hut that I have
told you once afforded us such a good luncheon; it looked a mere toy, as
if it came out of a child's box of playthings, and yet so snug for all its
lonely position. On the other hand lay our own little home, with the faint
wreath of smoke stealing up through the calm air (for the wind had dropped
at sunrise). Here and there we saw strings of sheep going down from their
high camping-grounds to feed on the sunny slopes and in the warm valleys.
Every moment added to our delight and enjoyment; but unfortunately it was
a sort of happiness which one can neither speak of at the time, nor write
about afterwards: silence is its most expressive language. Whilst I was
drinking in all the glory and beauty before me, some of the others had
been busy striking the tent, repacking the loads, very much lighter
without the provisions; and we had one more excellent cup of tea before
abandoning the encampment to the wekas, who must have breakfasted
splendidly that morning. Our last act was to collect all the stones we
could move into a huge cairn, which was built round a tall pole of totara;
on the summit of this we tied securely, with flax, the largest and
strongest pocket-handkerchief, and then, after one look round to the west—now
as glowing and bright as the radiant east—we set off homewards about
seven o'clock; but it was long before we reached the place where we left
the horses, for the gentlemen began rolling huge rocks down the sides of
the hills and watching them crashing and thundering into the valleys,
sometimes striking another rock and then bounding high into the air. They
were all as eager and excited as schoolboys, and I could not go on and
leave them, lest I should get below them and be crushed under a small
stone of twenty tons or so. I was therefore forced to keep well <i>above</i>
them all the time. At last we reached the spur where the horses were
tethered, re-saddled and loaded them, and arrived quite safely at home,
just in time for baths and breakfast. I was amused to see that no one
seemed to remember or allude to the miseries and aches of that long cold
night; all were full of professions of enjoyment. But I noticed that the
day was unusually quiet; the gentlemen preferred a bask in the verandah to
any other amusement, and I have reason to believe they indulged in a good
many naps.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XVIII: A journey "down south." </h2>
<p>Waimate, May 1867. In one of my early letters from Heathstock I told you
that the Hurunui, which is the boundary of that run, marks the extreme
north of the Province of Canterbury; and now I am writing to you from the
extreme south. I hope you do not forget to reverse in your own mind the
ordinary ideas of heat and cold, as connected with those points of the
compass. The distance from our house to this is about 160 miles, and we
actually took two days and a half to get here!—besides, into these
miles was compressed the fatigue of a dozen English railway journeys of
the same length. But, I suppose, as usual, you will not be satisfied
unless I begin at the very beginning. The first difficulty was to reach
the point where we were to join the coach on the Great South Road. It was
less than thirty miles, so we could easily have ridden the distance; but
the difficulty was to get our clothes all that way. They could not be
carried on horseback, and just then the station-dray was particularly
employed; besides which it would have taken three days to come and go,—rather
a useless expenditure of the man's time, as well as of the horses' legs,
where only two little portmanteaus were concerned. Fortunately for us,
however, this is a country where each man is ready and willing to help his
neighbour, without any inquiry as to who he is; so the moment our dilemma
was known various plans were suggested for our assistance, of which this
was the one selected:—</p>
<p>On a certain bright but cold Wednesday afternoon, F—— and I
and our modest luggage started in a neighbour's "trap" for the station I
have already mentioned on the Horarata, where Mr. C. H—— and I
stopped on our way to Lake Coleridge. It is on the plains at the foot of a
low range of downs, and about twelve miles from us. You cannot imagine a
more charming little cottage <i>ornee</i> than the house is, capable of
holding, apparently, an indefinite number of people, and with owners whose
hospitality always prompts them to try its capabilities to the utmost. A
creek runs near the house, and on its banks, sloping to the sun, lies a
lovely garden, as trim as any English parterre, and a mass of fruit and
flowers. Nothing can be more picturesque than the mixture of both. For
instance, on the wall of the house is a peach-tree laden every autumn with
rosy, velvet-cheeked fruit; and jasmine and passion-flowers growing
luxuriantly near it. Inside all is bright neatness and such a welcome! As
for our supper, on this particular day it comprised every dainty you can
imagine, and made me think of my housekeeping with shame and confusion of
face. We had a very merry evening, with round games; but there was a
strong prejudice in favour of going to bed early, as we all had to be up
by three o'clock: and so we were, to find a delicious breakfast prepared
for us, which our kind hostess was quite disappointed to see we could not
eat much of. Coffee and toast was all I could manage at that hour. We
started in the dark, and the first thing we had to cross was a dry
river-bed, in which one of the horses lay deliberately down, and refused
to move. This eccentricity delayed us very much; but we got him into a
better frame of mind, and accomplished our early drive of sixteen miles in
safety, reaching the accommodation-house, or inn, where the coach from
Christchurch to Timaru changes horses for its first stage, by six o'clock.
There we had a good breakfast, and were in great "form" by the time the
coach was ready to start. These conveyances have a world-wide celebrity as
"Cobb's coaches," both in America and Australia, where they are invariably
the pioneers of all wheeled vehicles, being better adapted to travel on a
bad road, or no road at all, than any other four-wheeled "trap." They are
both strong and light, with leathern springs and a powerful break; but I
cannot conscientiously say they are at all handsome carriages; indeed I
think them extremely ugly and not very comfortable except on the box-seat
next the driver. Fortunately, this is made to hold three, so F——
and I scrambled up, and off we started with four good strong horses,
bearing less harness about them than any quadrupeds I ever saw; a small
collar, slender traces, and very thin reins comprised all their
accoutrements. The first half of the journey was slow, but there was no
jolting. The road was level, though it had not been made at all, only the
tussocks removed from it; but it was naturally good—a great
exception to New Zealand roads. The driver was a steady, respectable man,
very intelligent; and when F——could make him talk of his
experiences in Australia in the early coaching days, I was much
interested.</p>
<p>We crossed the Rakaia and the Rangitata in ferry-boats, and stopped on the
banks of the Ashburton, to dine about one o'clock, having changed horses
twice since we started from "Gigg's," as our place of junction was
elegantly called. Here all my troubles began. When we came out of the
little inn, much comforted and refreshed by a good dinner, I found to my
regret that we were to change drivers as well as horses, and that a very
popular and well known individual was to be the new coachman. As our
former driver very politely assisted me to clamber up on the box-seat, he
recommended F—— to sit on the outside part of the seat, and to
put me next the driver, "where," he added, "the lady won't be so likely to
tumble out." As I had shown no disposition to fall off the coach hitherto,
I was much astonished by this precaution, but said nothing. So he was
emboldened to whisper, after looking round furtively, "And you jest take
and don't be afraid, marm; <i>he</i> handles the ribbings jest as well
when he's had a drop too much as when he's sober, which ain't often,
however." This last caution alarmed me extremely. The horses were not yet
put in, nor the driver put <i>up</i>, so I begged F—— to get
down and see if I could not go inside. But, after a hasty survey, he, said
it was quite impossible: men smoking, children crying, and, in addition, a
policeman with a lunatic in his charge, made the inside worse than the
outside, especially in point of atmosphere; so he repeated the substance
of our ex-driver's farewell speech; and when I saw our new charioteer
emerge at last from the bar, looking only very jovial and tolerably steady
as to gait, I thought perhaps my panic was premature. But, oh, what a time
I had of it for nine hours afterwards! The moment the grooms let go the
horses' heads he stood up on his seat, shook the reins, flourished his
long whip, and with one wild yell from him we dashed down a steep cutting
into the Ashburton. The water flew in spray far over our heads, and the
plunge wetted me as effectually as if I had fallen into the river. I
expected the front part of the coach to part from the back, on account of
the enormous strain caused by dragging it over the boulders. We lurched
like a boat in a heavy sea; the "insides" screamed; "Jim" (that was the
driver's name) swore and yelled; the horses reared and plunged. All this
time I was holding on like grim death to a light iron railing above my
head, and one glance to my left showed me F—— thrown off the
very small portion of cushion which fell to his share, and clinging
desperately to a rude sort of lamp-frame. I speculated for an instant
whether this would break; and, if so, what would become of him. But it
took all my ideas to keep myself from being jerked off among the horses'
heels. We dashed through the river; Jim gathered up the reins, and with a
different set of oaths swore he would punish the horses for jibbing in the
water. And he did punish them; he put the break hard down for some way,
flogged them with all his strength, dancing about the coach-box and
yelling like a madman. Every now and then, in the course of his bounds
from place to place, he would come plump down on my lap; but I was too
much frightened to remonstrate; indeed, we were going at such a pace
against the wind, I had very little breath to spare.</p>
<p>We got over the first stage of twenty miles at this rate very quickly, as
you may imagine; but, unfortunately, there was an accommodation-house
close to the stables, and Jim had a good deal more refreshment. Strange to
say, this did not make him any wilder in manner—that he could not
be; but after we started again he became extremely friendly with me,
addressing me invariably as "my dear," and offering to "treat me" at every
inn from that to Timaru. I declined, as briefly as I could, whereupon he
became extremely angry, at my doubting his pecuniary resources apparently,
for, holding the reins carelessly with one hand, though we were still
tearing recklessly along, he searched his pockets with the other hand, and
produced from them a quantity of greasy, dirty one-pound notes, all of
which he laid on my lap, saying, "There, and there, and there, if you
think I'm a beggar!" I fully expected them to blow away, for I could not
spare a hand to hold them; but I watched my opportunity when he was
punishing the unfortunate fresh team, and pounced on them, thrusting the
dirty heap back into his great-coat pocket. At the next stage a very tidy
woman came out, with a rather large bundle, containing fresh linen, she
said, for her son, who was ill in the hospital at Timaru. She booked this,
and paid her half-crown for its carriage, entreating the drunken wretch to
see that it reached her son that night. He wildly promised he should have
it in half-an-hour, and we set off as if he meant to keep his word, though
we were some forty miles off yet; but he soon changed his mind, and took a
hatred to the parcel, saying it would "sink the ship," and finally tried
to kick it over the splash-board. I seized it at the risk of losing my
balance, and hugged it tight all the way to Timaru, carrying it off to the
hotel, where I induced a waiter to take it up to the hospital.</p>
<p>After we had changed horses for the last time, and I was comforting myself
by the reflection that the journey was nearly over, we heard shouts and
screams from the inside passengers. F—— persuaded Jim with
much trouble to pull up, and jumped down to see what was the matter. A
strong smell of burning and a good deal of smoke arose from inside the
coach, caused by the lunatic having taken off both his boots and lighted a
fire in them. It was getting dark and chilly; the other passengers,
including the policeman, had dozed off and the madman thought that as his
feet were very cold, he would "try and warm them a bit;" so he collected
all the newspapers with which his fellow-travellers had been solacing the
tedium of their journey, tore, them up into shreds, with the addition of
the contents of a poor woman's bundle, and made quite a cheerful blaze out
of these materials. It was some time before the terrified women could be
induced to get into the coach again; and it was only by Jims
asseverations, couched in the strongest language, that if they were not
"all aboard" in half a minute, he would drive on and leave them in the
middle of the plains, that they were persuaded to clamber in to their
places once more.</p>
<p>How thankful I was when we saw the lights of Timaru! I was stunned and
bewildered, tired beyond the power of words to describe, and black and
blue all over from being jolted about. The road had been an excellent one,
all the way level and wide, with telegraph-poles by its side. We shaved
these very closely often enough, but certainly, amid all his tipsiness,
Jim bore out his predecessors remark. Whenever we came to a little dip in
the road, or a sharp turn, as we were nearing Timaru, he would get the
horses under control as if by magic, and take us over as safely as the
soberest driver could have done; the moment the obstacle was passed, off
we were again like a whirlwind!</p>
<p>I was not at all surprised to hear that upsets and accidents were common
on the road, and that the horses lasted but a very short time.</p>
<p>We found our host had driven in from his station forty-five miles distant
from Timaru, to meet us, and had ordered nice rooms and a good dinner; so
the next morning I was quite rested, and ready to laugh over my miseries
of the day before. Nothing could be a greater contrast than this day's
journeying to yesterday's. A low, comfortable phaeton, and one of the most
agreeable companions in the world to drive us, beautiful scenery and a
nice luncheon half-way, at which meal F—— ate something like
half a hundred cheese-cakes! The last part of the road for a dozen miles
or so was rather rough; we had to cross a little river, the Waio, every
few hundred yards; and a New Zealand river has so much shingle about it!
The water can never quite make up its mind where it would like to go, and
has half-a-dozen channels ready to choose from, and then in a heavy fresh
the chances are it will select and make quite a different course after
all.</p>
<p>This is late autumn with us, remember, so the evenings close in early and,
are very cold indeed. It was quite dark when we reached the house, and the
blazing fires in every room were most welcome. The house is very unlike
the conventional station pattern, being built of stone, large, very well
arranged, and the perfection of comfort inside. There is no hostess at
present; three bachelor brothers do the honours, and, as far as my
experience goes, do them most efficiently. Our visit has lasted three
weeks already, and we really must bring it to a termination soon. The
weather has been beautiful, and we have made many delightful excursions,
all on horseback, to neighbouring stations, to a fine bush where we had a
picnic, or to some point of view. I can truly say I have enjoyed every
moment of the time, indoors as well as out; I was the only lady, and was
petted and made much of to my heart's content. There were several other
guests, and they were all nice and amusing. One wet day we had, and only
one. I must tell you an incident of it, to show you what babies grown-up
men can be at the Antipodes. We worked hard all the morning at acrostics,
and after my five o'clock tea I went upstairs to a charming little boudoir
prepared for me, to rest and read; in a short time I heard something like
music and stamping, and, though I was <i>en peignoir</i>, I stole softly
down to see what was going on; when I opened the door of the general
sitting-room a most unusual sight presented itself,—eight bearded
men, none of them very young, were dancing a set of quadrilles with the
utmost gravity and decorum to the tunes played by a large musical-box,
which was going at the most prodigious pace, consequently the dancers were
flying through the figures in silence and breathless haste. They could not
stop or speak when I came in, and seemed quite surprised at my laughing at
them; but you have no idea how ridiculous they looked, especially as their
gravity and earnestness were profound.</p>
<p>This is one of the very few stations where pheasants have been introduced,
but then, every arrangement has been made for their comfort, and a
beautiful house and yard built for their reception on a flat, just beneath
the high terrace on which the house stands. More than a hundred young
birds were turned out last spring, and there will probably be three times
that number at the end of this year. We actually had pheasant twice at
dinner; the first, and probably the last time we shall taste game in New
Zealand. There is a good deal of thick scrub in the clefts of the
home-terrace, and this affords excellent shelter for the young. Their
greatest enemies are the hawks, and every variety of trap and cunning
device for the destruction of these latter are in use, but as yet without
doing much execution among them, they are so wonderfully clever and
discerning.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> Letter XIX: A Christening gathering.—the fate of Dick. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, June 1867. We reached home quite safely the first week of this
month, and I immediately set to work to prepare for the Bishop's visit. We
met him at a friend's house one day, just as we were starting homewards,
and something led to my telling him about the destitute spiritual
condition of my favourite "nest of Cockatoos." With his usual energy, as
well as goodness, he immediately volunteered to come up to our little
place, hold a service, and christen all the children. We were only too
thankful to accept such an offer, as we well knew what an inducement it
would be to the people, who would take a great deal of trouble and come
from far and near to hear our dear Bishop, who is universally beloved and
respected.</p>
<p>For a week beforehand the house smelt all day long like a baker's shop
about noon on Sunday, for pies, tarts, cakes, etc., were perpetually being
"drawn" from the oven. I borrowed every pie-dish for miles round, and, as
on another occasion I have mentioned, plenty of good things which our own
resources could not furnish forth came pouring in on all sides with offers
to help. F—— and I scoured the country for thirty miles round
to invite everybody to come over to us that Sunday; and I think I may
truly say everybody came. When I rode over to my "nest" and made the
announcement of the Bishop's visit, the people were very much delighted;
but a great difficulty arose from the sudden demand for white frocks for
all the babies and older children. I rashly promised each child should
find a clean white garment awaiting it on its arrival at my house, and
took away a memorandum of all the different ages and sizes; the "order"
never could have been accomplished without the aid of my sewing-machine. I
had a few little frocks by me as patterns, and cut up some very smart
white embroidered petticoats which were quite useless to me, to make into
little skirts. In spite of all that was going on in the kitchen my maids
found time to get these up most beautifully, and by the Saturday night the
little bed in the spare room was a heap of snowy small garments, with a
name written on paper and pinned to each. The Bishop also arrived quite
safely, late that evening, having driven himself up from Christchurch in a
little gig.</p>
<p>It is impossible for you to imagine a more beautiful winter's morning than
dawned on us that Sunday. A sharp frost over-night only made the air
deliciously crisp, for the sun shone so brightly, that by nine o'clock the
light film of ice over the ponds had disappeared, and I found the Bishop
basking in the verandah when I came out to breakfast, instead of sitting
over the blazing wood-fire in the dining-room. We got our meal finished as
quickly as possible, and then F—— and Mr. U—— set
to work to fill the verandah with forms extemporised out of empty boxes
placed at each end, and planks laid across them; every red blanket in the
house was pressed into service to cover these rough devices, and the
effect at last was quite tidy. By eleven o'clock the drays began to arrive
in almost a continual stream; as each came up, its occupants were taken
into the kitchen, and given as much as they could eat of cold pies made of
either pork or mutton, bread and hot potatoes, and tea. As for teapots,
they were discarded, and the tea was made in huge kettles, whilst the milk
stood in buckets, into which quart jugs were dipped every five minutes. I
took care of all the women and children whilst F—— and Mr. U——
looked after the men, showed them where to put the horses, etc. All this
time several gentlemen and two or three ladies had arrived, but there was
no one to attend to them, so they all very kindly came out and helped. We
insisted on the Bishop keeping quiet in the drawing-room, or he would have
worked as hard as any one. I never could have got the children into their
white frocks by two o'clock if it had not been for the help of the other
ladies; but at last they were all dressed, and the congregation—not
much under a hundred people—fed, and arranged in their places. There
had been a difficulty about finding sufficient godmothers and godfathers,
so F—— and I were sponsors for every child, and each parent
wished me to hand the child to the Bishop; but I could not lift up many of
the bigger ones, and they roared piteously when I touched their hands. I
felt it quite a beautiful and thrilling scene; the sunburnt faces all
around, the chubby, pretty little group of white-clad children, every one
well fed and comfortably clothed, the dogs lying at their masters feet,
the bright winter sunshine and dazzling sky, and our dear Bishops
commanding figure and clear, penetrating voice! He gave us a most
excellent sermon, short and simple, but so perfectly appropriate; and
after the service was over he went about, talking to all the various
groups such nice, helpful words.</p>
<p>The truest kindness was now to "speed the parting guest," so each dray
load, beginning with those whose homes were the most distant, was
collected. They were first taken into the kitchen and given a good meal of
hot tea, cake, and bread and butter, for many had four hours' jolting
before them; the red blankets were again called into requisition to act as
wraps, besides every cloak and shawl I possessed, for the moment the sun
sunk, which would be about four o'clock, the cold was sure to become
intense. We lived that day in the most scrambling fashion ourselves; there
was plenty of cold meat, etc., on the dining-room table, and piles of
plates, and whenever any of the party were hungry they went and helped
themselves, as my two servants were entirely occupied with looking after
the comfort of the congregation; it was such a treat to them to have, even
for a few hours, the society of other women. They have only one female
neighbour, and she is generally too busy to see much of them; besides
which, I think the real reason of the want of intimacy is that Mrs. M——
is a very superior person, and when she comes up I generally like to have
a chat with her myself. It does me good to see her bonny Scotch face, and
hear the sweet kindly "Scot's tongue;" besides which she is my great
instructress in the mysteries of knitting socks and stockings, spinning,
making really good butter (not an easy thing, madam), and in all sorts of
useful accomplishments; her husband is the head shepherd on the next
station. They are both very fond of reading, and it was quite pretty to
see the delight they took in the Queen's book about the Highlands.</p>
<p>To return, however, to that Sunday. We were all dreadfully tired by the
time the last guest had departed, but we had a delightfully quiet evening,
and a long talk with the Bishop about our favourite scheme of the church
and school among the Cockatoos, and we may feel certain of his hearty
cooperation in any feasible plan for carrying it out. The next morning,
much to our regret, the Bishop left us for Christchurch, but he had to
hold a Confirmation service there, and could not give us even a few more
hours. We were so very fortunate in our weather. The following Sunday was
a pouring wet day, and we have had wind and rain almost ever since; it is
unusually wet, so I have nothing more to tell you of our doings, which
must seem very eccentric to you, by the way, but I assure you I enjoy the
gipsy unconventional life immensely.</p>
<p>You must not be critical about a jumble of subjects if I record poor
Dick's tragical fate here; it will serve to fill up my letter, and if ever
you have mourned for a pet dog you will sympathise with me. I must first
explain to you that on a sheep station strange dogs are regarded with a
most unfriendly eye by both master and shepherds. There are the proper
colleys,—generally each shepherd has two,—but no other dogs
are allowed, and I had great trouble to coax F—— to allow me
to accept two. One is a beautiful water-spaniel, jet black, Brisk by name,
but his character is stainless in the matter of sheep, and though very
handsome he is only an amiable idiot, his one amusement being to chase a
weka, which he never catches. The other dog was, alas! Dick, a small
black-and-tan terrier, very well bred, and full of tricks and play. We
never even suspected him of any wickedness, but as it turned out he must
have been a hardened offender. A few weeks after he came to us, when the
lambing season was at its height, and the low sunny hills near the house
were covered with hundreds of the pretty little white creatures, F——used
sometimes to come and ask me where Dick was, and, strange to say, Dick
constantly did not answer to my call. An evening or two later, just as we
were starting for our walk, Dick appeared in a great hurry from the back
of the stable. F—— went up immediately to him, and stooped
down to examine his mouth, calling me to see. Oh, horror! it was all
covered with blood and wool. I pleaded all sorts of extenuating
circumstances, but F—— said, with: judicial sternness, "This
cannot be allowed." Dick was more fascinating than usual, never looking at
a sheep whilst we were out walking with him, and behaving in the most
exemplary manner. F—— watched him all the next day, and at
last caught him in the act of killing a new-born lamb a little way from
the house; the culprit was brought to me hanging his tail with the most
guilty air, and F—— said, "I ought to shoot him, but if you
like I will try if a beating can cure him, but it must be a tremendous
one." I was obliged to accept this alternative, and retreated where I
could not hear Dick's howls under the lash, over the body of his victim. A
few hours after I went to the spot, lifted Dick up, and carried him into
my room to nurse him; for he could not move, he had been beaten so
severely. For two whole days he lay on the soft mat I gave him, only able
to lap a little warm milk; on the third morning he tried to get up, and
crawled into the verandah; I followed to watch him. Imagine my dismay at
seeing him limp to the place where the body of his last victim lay, and
deliberately begin tearing it to pieces. I followed him with my little
horsewhip and gave him a slight beating. I could not find it in my heart
to hit him very hard. I carefully concealed this incident from F——,
and for some days I never let Dick out of my sight for a moment; but early
one fine morning a knock came to our bed-room door, and a voice said,
"Please, sir, come and see what's the matter with the sheep? there's a
large mob of them at the back of the house being driven, like." Oh, my
prophetic soul! I felt it was Dick. Whilst F—— was huddling on
some clothes I implored him to temper justice with mercy, but never a word
did he say, and sternly took his gun in his hand and went out. I buried my
head in the pillows, but for all my precautions I heard the report of a
shot in the clear morning air, and the echo ringing back from all the
hills; five minutes afterwards F—— came in with a little blue
collar in his hand, and said briefly, "He has worried more than a dozen
lambs this morning alone." What could I say? F——'s only
attempt at consolation was, "he died instantly; I shot him through the
head." But for many days afterwards I felt quite lonely and sad without my
poor little pet—yet what could have been done? No one would have
accepted him as a present, and it flashed on me afterwards that perhaps
this vice of his was the reason of Dick's former owner being so anxious to
give him to me. I have had two offers of successors to Dick since, but I
shall never have another dog on a sheep station, unless I know what Mr.
Dickens' little dressmaker calls "its tricks and its manners."</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XX: the New Zealand snowstorm of 1867. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, August 1867. I have had my first experience of real hardships
since I last wrote to you. Yes, we have all had to endure positive hunger
and cold, and, what I found much harder to bear, great anxiety of mind. I
think I mentioned that the weather towards the end of July had been
unusually disagreeable, but not very cold This wet fortnight had a great
deal to do with our sufferings afterwards, for it came exactly at the time
we were accustomed to send our dray down to Christchurch for supplies of
flour and groceries, and to lay in a good stock of coals for the winter;
these latter had been ordered, and were expected every day. Just the last
few days of July the weather cleared up, and became like our usual most
beautiful winter climate; so, after waiting a day or two, to allow the
roads to dry a little, the dray was despatched to town, bearing a long
list of orders, and with many injunctions to the driver to return as
quickly as possible, for all the stores were at the lowest ebb. I am
obliged to tell you these domestic details, in order that you may
understand the reason of our privations. I acknowledge, humbly, that it
was not good management, but sometimes accidents <i>will</i> occur. It was
also necessary for F—— to make a journey to Christchurch on
business, and as he probably would be detained there for nearly a week, it
was arranged that one of the young gentlemen from Rockwood should ride
over and escort me back there, to remain during F——'s absence.
I am going to give you all the exact dates, for this snow-storm will be a
matter of history, during the present generation at all events: there is
no tradition among the Maoris of such a severe one ever having occurred;
and what made it more fatal in its financial consequences to every one
was, that the lambing season had only just commenced or terminated on most
of the runs. Only a few days before he left, F—— had taken me
for a ride in the sheltered valleys, that he might see the state of the
lambs, and pronounced it most satisfactory; thousands of the pretty little
creatures were skipping about by their mothers' side.</p>
<p>I find, by my Diary, July 29th marked, as the beginning of a
"sou'-wester." F—— had arranged to start that morning, and as
his business was urgent, he did not like to delay his departure, though
the day was most unpromising, a steady, fine drizzle, and raw atmosphere;
however, we hurried breakfast, and he set off, determining to push on to
town as quickly as possible. I never spent such a dismal day in my life:
my mind was disturbed by secret anxieties about the possibility of the
dray being detained by wet weather, and there was such an extraordinary
weight in the air, the dense mist seemed pressing everything down to the
ground; however, I drew the sofa to the fire, made up a good blaze (the
last I saw for some time), and prepared to pass a lazy day with a book;
but I felt so restless and miserable I did not know what was the matter
with me. I wandered from window to window, and still the same unusual
sight met my eyes; a long procession of ewes and lambs, all travelling
steadily down from the hills towards the large flat in front of the house;
the bleating was incessant, and added to the intense melancholy of the
whole affair. When Mr. U—— came in to dinner; at one o'clock,
he agreed with me that it was most unusual weather, and said, that on the
other ranges the sheep were drifting before the cold mist and rain just in
the same way. Our only anxiety arose from the certainty that the dray
would be delayed at least a day, and perhaps two; this was a dreadful
idea: for some time past we had been economising our resources to make
them last, and we knew that there was absolutely nothing at the
home-station, nor at our nearest neighbour's, for they had sent to borrow
tea and sugar from us. Just at dusk that evening, two gentlemen rode up,
not knowing F—— was from home, and asked if they might remain
for the night. I knew them both very well; in fact, one was our cousin T——,
and the other an old friend; so they put up their horses, and housed their
dogs (for each had a valuable sheep-dog with him) in a barrel full of
clean straw, and we all tried to spend a cheerful evening, but everybody
confessed to the same extraordinary depression of spirits that I felt.</p>
<p>When I awoke the next morning, I was not much surprised to see the snow
falling thick and fast: no sheep were now visible, there was a great
silence, and the oppression in the atmosphere had if possible increased.
We had a very poor breakfast,—no porridge, very little mutton (for
in expectation of the house being nearly empty, the shepherd had not
brought any over the preceding day), and <i>very</i> weak tea; coffee and
cocoa all finished, and about an ounce of tea in the chest. I don't know
how the gentlemen amused themselves that day; I believe they smoked a good
deal; I could only afford a small fire in the drawing-room, over which I
shivered. The snow continued to fall in dense fine clouds, quite unlike
any snow I ever saw before, and towards night I fancied the garden fence
was becoming very much dwarfed. Still the consolation was, "Oh, it won't
last; New Zealand snow never: does." However, on Wednesday morning things
began to look very serious indeed: the snow covered the ground to a depth
of four feet in the shallowest places, and still continued to fall
steadily; the cows we knew <i>must</i> be in the paddock were not to be
seen anywhere; the fowl-house and pig-styes which stood towards the
weather quarter had entirely disappeared; every scrap of wood (and several
logs were lying about at the back) was quite covered up; both the
verandahs were impassable; in one the snow was six feet deep, and the only
door which could be opened was the back-kitchen door, as that opened
inwards; but here the snow was half-way over the roof, so it took a good
deal of work with the kitchen-shovel, for no spades could be found, to dig
out a passage. Indoors, we were approaching our last mouthful very
rapidly, the tea at breakfast was merely coloured hot water, and we had
some picnic biscuits with it. For dinner we had the last tin of sardines,
the last pot of apricot jam, and a tin of ratifia biscuits a most
extraordinary mixture, I admit, but there was nothing else. There were six
people to be fed every day, and nothing to feed them with. Thursday's
breakfast was a discovered crust of dry bread, very stale, and our dinner
that day was rice and salt—the last rice in the store-room. The snow
still never ceased falling, and only one window in the house afforded us
any light; every box was broken up and used for fuel. The gentlemen used
to go all together and cut, or rather dig, a passage through the huge
drift in front of the stable, and with much difficulty get some food for
the seven starving horses outside, who were keeping a few yards clear by
incessantly moving about, the snow making high walls all around them.</p>
<p>It was wonderful to see how completely the whole aspect of the surrounding
scenery was changed; the gullies were all filled up, and nearly level with
the downs; sharp-pointed cliffs were now round bluffs; there was no
vestige of a fence or gate or shrub to be seen, and still the snow came
down as if it had only just begun to fall; out of doors the silence was
like death, I was told, for I could only peep down the tunnel dug every
few hours at the back-kitchen door. My two maids now gave way, and sat
clasped in each other's arms all day, crying piteously, and bewailing
their fate, asking me whenever I came into the kitchen, which was about
every half-hour, for there was no fire elsewhere, "And oh, when do you
think we'll be found, mum?" Of course this only referred to the ultimate
discovery of our bodies. There was a great search to-day for the cows, but
it was useless, the gentlemen sank up to their shoulders in snow. Friday,
the same state of things: a little flour had been discovered in a
discarded flour-bag, and we had a sort of girdle-cake and water. The only
thing remaining in the store-room was some blacklead, and I was
considering seriously how that could be cooked, or whether it would be
better raw: we were all more than half starved, and quite frozen: very
little fire in the kitchen, and none in any other room. Of course, the
constant thought was, "Where are the sheep?" Not a sign or sound could be
heard. The dogs' kennels were covered several feet deep; so we could not
get at them at all. Saturday morning: the first good news I heard was that
the cows had been found, and dragged by ropes down to the enclosure the
horses had made for them-selves: they were half dead, poor beasts; but
after struggling for four hours to and from a haystack two hundred yards
off, one end of which was unburied, some oaten hay was procured for them.
There was now not a particle of food in the house. The servants remained
in their beds, declining to get up, and alleging that they might as well
"die warm." In the middle of the day a sort of forlorn-hope was organized
by the gentlemen to try to find the fowl-house, but they could not get
through the drift: however, they dug a passage to the wash-house, and
returned in triumph with about a pound of very rusty bacon they had found
hanging up there; this was useless without fuel, so they dug for a little
gate leading to the garden, fortunately hit its whereabouts, and soon had
it broken up and in the kitchen grate. By dint of taking all the lead out
of the tea-chests, shaking it, and collecting every pinch of tea-dust, we
got enough to make a teapot of the weakest tea, a cup of which I took to
my poor crying maids in their beds, having first put a spoonful of the
last bottle of whisky which the house possessed into it, for there was
neither, sugar nor milk to be had. At midnight the snow ceased for a few
hours, and a hard sharp frost set in; this made our position worse, for
they could now make no impression on the snow, and only broke the shovels
in trying. I began to think seriously of following the maids example, in
order to "die warm." We could do nothing but wait patiently. I went up to
a sort of attic where odds and ends were stowed away, in search of
something to eat, but could find nothing more tempting than a supply of
wax matches. We knew there was a cat under the house, for we heard her
mewing; and it was suggested to take up the carpets first, then the
boards, and have a hunt for the poor old pussy but we agreed to bear our
hunger a little longer, chiefly, I am afraid, because she was known to be
both thin and aged.</p>
<p>Towards noon on Sunday the weather suddenly changed, and rain began to
come down heavily and steadily; this cheered us all immensely, as it would
wash the snow away probably, and so it did to some degree; the highest
drifts near the house lessened considerably in a few hours, and the
gentlemen, who by this time were desperately hungry, made a final attempt
in the direction of the fowl-house, found the roof, tore off some
shingles, and returned with a few aged hens, which were mere bundles of
feathers after their week's starvation. The servants consented to rise and
pluck them, whilst the gentlemen sallied forth once more to the
stock-yard, and with great difficulty got off two of the cap or top rails,
so we had a splendid though transitory blaze, and some hot stewed fowl; it
was more of a soup than anything else, but still we thought it delicious:
and then everybody went to bed again, for the house was quite dark still,
and the oil and candles were running very low. On Monday morning the snow
was washed off the roof a good deal by the deluge of rain which had never
ceased to come steadily down, and the windows were cleared a little, just
at the top; but we were delighted with the improvement, and some cold weak
fowl-soup for breakfast, which we thought excellent. On getting out of
doors, the gentlemen reported the creeks to be much swollen and rushing in
yellow streams down the sides of the hills over the snow, which was
apparently as thick as ever; but it was now easier to get through at the
surface, though quite solid for many feet from the ground. A window was
scraped clear, through which I could see the desolate landscape out of
doors, and some hay was carried with much trouble to the starving cows and
horses, but this was a work of almost incredible difficulty. Some more
fowls were procured to-day, nearly the last, for a large hole in the roof
showed most of them dead of cold and hunger.</p>
<p>We were all in much better spirits on this night, for there were signs of
the wind shifting from south to north-west; and, for the first time in our
lives I suppose, we were anxiously watching and desiring this change, as
it was the only chance of saving the thousands of sheep and lambs we now
knew lay buried under the smooth white winding-sheet of snow. Before
bedtime we heard the fitful gusts we knew so well, and had never before
hailed with such deep joy and thankfulness. Every time I woke the same
welcome sound of the roaring warm gale met my ears; and we were prepared
for the pleasant sight, on Tuesday morning, of the highest rocks on the
hill-tops standing out gaunt and bare once more. The wind was blowing the
snow off the hills in clouds like spray, and melting it everywhere so
rapidly that we began to have a new anxiety, for the creeks were rising
fast, and running in wide, angry-looking rivers over the frozen snow on
the banks. All immediate apprehension of starvation, however, was removed,
for the gentlemen dug a pig out of his stye, where he had been warm and
comfortable with plenty of straw, and slaughtered him; and in the loft of
the stable was found a bag of Indian meal for fattening poultry, which
made excellent cakes of bread. It was very nasty having only ice-cold
water to drink at every meal. I especially missed my tea for breakfast;
but felt ashamed to grumble, for my disagreeables were very light compared
to those of the three gentlemen. From morning to night they were wet
through, as the snow of course melted the moment they came indoors. All
the first part of the last week they used to work out of doors, trying to
get food and fuel, or feeding the horses, in the teeth of a bitter wind,
with the snow driving like powdered glass against their smarting hands and
faces; and they were as cheery and merry as possible through it all,
trying hard to pretend they were neither hungry nor cold, when they must
have been both. Going out of doors at this stage of affairs simply meant
plunging up to their middle in a slush of half-melted snow which wet them
thoroughly in a moment; and they never had dry clothes on again till they
changed after dark, when there was no more possibility of outdoor work.</p>
<p>Wednesday morning broke bright and clear for the first time since Sunday
week; we actually saw the sun. Although the "nor-wester" had done so much
good for us, and a light wind still blew softly from that quarter, the
snow was yet very deep; but I felt in such high spirits that I determined
to venture out, and equipped myself in a huge pair of F——'s
riding-boots made of kangaroo-skin, well greased with weka-oil to keep the
wet out, These I put on over my own thick boots, but my precautions "did
nought avail," for the first step I took sank me deep in the snow over the
tops of my enormous boots. They filled immediately, and then merely served
to keep the snow securely packed round my ankles; however, I struggled
bravely on, every now and then sinking up to my shoulders, and having to
be hauled out by main force. The first thing done was to dig out the dogs,
who assisted the process by vigorously scratching away inside and
tunnelling towards us. Poor things! how thin they looked, but they were
quite warm; and after indulging in a long drink at the nearest creek, they
bounded about, like mad creatures. The only casualties in the kennels were
two little puppies, who were lying cuddled up as if they were asleep, but
proved to be stiff and cold; and a very old but still valuable collie
called "Gipsy." She was enduring such agonies from rheumatism that it was
terrible to hear her howls; and after trying to relieve her by rubbing,
taking her into the stable-and in fact doing all we could for her—it
seemed better and kinder to shoot her two days afterwards.</p>
<p>We now agreed to venture into the paddock and see what had happened to the
bathing-place about three hundred yards from the house. I don't think I
have told you that the creek had been here dammed up with a sod wall
twelve feet high, and a fine deep and broad pond made, which was cleared
of weeds and grass, and kept entirely for the gentlemen to have a plunge
and swim at daylight of a summer's morning; there had been a wide trench
cut about two feet from the top, so as to carry off the water, and
hitherto this had answered perfectly. The first thing we had to do was to
walk over the high five-barred gate leading into the paddock just the
topmost bar was sticking up, but there was not a trace of the little
garden-gate or of the fence, which was quite a low one. We were, however,
rejoiced to see that on the ridges of the sunny downs there were patches,
or rather streaks, of tussocks visible, and they spread in size every
moment, for the sun was quite warm, and the "nor'-wester," had done much
towards softening the snow. It took us a long time to get down to where
the bathing-place <i>had been</i>, for the sod wall was quite carried
away, and there was now only a heap of ruin, with a muddy torrent pouring
through the large gap and washing it still more away. Close to this was a
very sunny sheltered down, or rather hill; and as the snow was rapidly
melting off its warm sloping sides we agreed to climb it and see if any
sheep could be discovered, for up to this time there had been none seen or
heard, though we knew several thousands must be on this flat and the
adjoining ones.</p>
<p>As soon as we got to the top the first glance showed us a small dusky
patch close to the edge of one of the deepest and widest creeks at the
bottom of the pad-dock; experienced eyes saw they were sheep, but to me
they had not the shape of animals at all, though they were quite near
enough to be seen distinctly. I observed the gentlemen exchange looks of
alarm, and they said to each other some low words, from which I gathered
that they feared the worst. Before we went down to the flat we took a
long, careful look round, and made out another patch, dark by comparison
with the snow, some two hundred yards lower down the creek, but apparently
in the water. On the other side of the little hill the snow seemed to have
drifted even more deeply, for the long narrow valley which lay there
presented, as far as we could see, one smooth, level snow-field. On the
dazzling white surface the least fleck shows, and I can never forget how
beautiful some swamp-hens, with their dark blue plumage, short, pert,
white tails, and long bright legs, looked, as they searched slowly along
the banks of the swollen creek for some traces of their former haunts; but
every tuft of tohi-grass lay bent and buried deep beneath its heavy
covering. The gentlemen wanted me to go home before they attempted to see
the extent of the disaster, which we all felt must be very great; but I
found it impossible to do anything but accompany them. I am half glad and
half sorry now that I was obstinate; glad because I helped a little at a
time when the least help was precious, and sorry because it was really
such a horrible sight. Even the first glance showed us that, as soon as we
got near the spot we had observed, we were walking on frozen sheep
embedded in the snow one over the other; but at all events their misery
had been over some time. It was more horrible to see the drowning, or just
drowned, huddled-up "mob" (as sheep <i>en masse</i> are technically
called) which had made the dusky patch we had noticed from the hill.</p>
<p>No one can ever tell how many hundred ewes and lambs had taken refuge
under the high terrace which forms the bank of the creek. The snow had
soon covered them up, but they probably were quite warm and dry at first.
The terrible mischief was caused by the creek rising so rapidly, and,
filtering through the snow which it gradually dissolved, drowned them as
they stood huddled together. Those nearest the edge of the water of course
went first, but we were fortunately in time to save a good many, though
the living seemed as nothing compared to the heaps of dead. We did not
waste a moment in regrets or idleness; the most experienced of the
gentlemen said briefly what was to be done, and took his coat off; the
other coats and my little Astrachan jacket were lying by its side in an
instant, and we all set to work, sometimes up to our knees in icy water,
digging at the bank of snow above us—if you can call it digging when
we had nothing but our hands to dig, or rather scratch, with. Oh, how hot
we were in five minutes! the sun beating on us, and the reflection from
the snow making its rays almost blinding. It was of no use my attempting
to rescue the sheep, for I could not move them, even when I had <i>scrattled</i>
the snow away from one. A sheep, especially with its fleece full of snow,
is beyond my small powers: even the lambs I found a tremendous weight, and
it must have been very absurd, if an idler had been by, to see me, with a
little lamb in my arms, tumbling down at every second step, but still
struggling manfully towards the dry oasis where we put each animal as it
was dug out. The dear doggies helped us beautifully, working so eagerly
and yet so wisely under their master's eye, as patient and gentle with the
poor stiffened creatures as if they could feel for them. I was astonished
at the vitality of some of the survivors; if they had been very far back
and not chilled by the water, they were quite lively. The strongest sheep
were put across the stream by the dogs, who were obedient to their
master's finger, and not to be induced on any terms to allow the sheep to
land a yard to one side of the place on the opposite bank, but just where
they were to go. A good many were swept away, but after six hours' work we
counted 1,400 rescued ones slowly "trailing" up the low sunny hill I have
mentioned, and nibbling at the tussocks as they went. The proportion of
lambs was, of course, very small, but the only wonder to me is that there
were any alive at all. If I had been able to stop my scratching but for a
moment, I would have had what the servants call a "good cry" over one
little group I laid bare. Two fine young ewes were standing leaning
against each other in a sloping position, like a tent, frozen and
immoveable: between them, quite dry, and as lively as a kitten, was a dear
little lamb of about a month old belonging to one; the lamb of the other
lay curled up at her feet, dead and cold; I really believe they had hit
upon this way of keeping the other alive. A more pathetic sight I never
beheld.</p>
<p>It is needless to say that we were all most dreadfully exhausted by the
time the sun went down, and it began to freeze; nothing but the sheer
impossibility of doing anything more in the hardening snow and approaching
darkness made us leave off even then, though we had not tasted food all
day. The gentlemen took an old ewe, who could not stand, though it was not
actually dead, up to the stable and killed it, to give the poor dogs a
good meal, and then they had to get some more rails off the stock-yard to
cook our own supper of pork and maize.</p>
<p>The next morning was again bright with a warm wind; so the effect of the
night's frost soon disappeared, and we were hard at work directly after
breakfast. Nothing would induce me to stay at home, but I armed myself
with a coal-scoop to dig, and we made our way to the other "mob;" but,
alas! there was nothing to do in the way of saving life, for all the sheep
were dead. There was a large island formed at a bend in the creek, where
the water had swept with such fury round a point as to wash the snow and
sheep all away together, till at some little obstacle they began to
accumulate in a heap. I counted ninety-two dead ewes in one spot, but I
did not stay to count the lambs. We returned to the place where we had
been digging the day before, and set the dogs to hunt in the drifts;
wherever they began to scratch we shovelled the snow away, and were sure
to find sheep either dead or nearly so: however, we liberated a good many
more. This sort of work continued till the following Saturday, when F——
returned, having had a most dangerous journey, as the roads are still
blocked up in places with snow-drifts; but he was anxious to get back,
knowing I must have been going through "hard times." He was terribly
shocked at the state of things among the sheep; in Christchurch no
definite news had reached them from any quarter: all the coaches were
stopped and the telegraph wires broken down by the snow. He arrived about
mid-day, and, directly after the meal we still called dinner, started off
over the hills to my "nest of Cockatoos," and brought back some of the men
with him to help to search for the sheep, and to skin those that were dead
as fast as possible. He worked himself all day at the skinning,—a
horrible job; but the fleeces were worth something, and soon all the
fences, as they began to emerge from the snow, were tapestried with these
ghastly skins, and walking became most disagreeable, on account of the
evil odours arising every few yards.</p>
<p>We forgot all our personal sufferings in anxiety about the surviving
sheep, and when the long-expected dray arrived it seemed a small boon
compared to the discovery of a nice little "mob" feeding tranquilly on a
sunny spur. It is impossible to estimate our loss until the grand muster
at shearing, but we may set it down at half our flock, and <i>all</i> our
lambs, or at least 90 per cent. of them. Our neighbours are all as busy as
we are, so no accurate accounts of their sufferings or losses have reached
us; but, to judge by appearances, the distant "back-country" ranges must
have felt the storm more severely even than we have; and although the snow
did not drift to such a depth on the plains as with us, or lie so long on
the ground, they suffered just as much,—for the sheep took shelter
under the high river-banks, and the tragedy of the creeks was enacted on a
still larger scale; or they drifted along before the first day's gale till
they came to a wire fence, and there they were soon covered up, and
trampled each other to death. Not only were sheep, but cattle, found dead
in hundreds along the fences on the plains. The newspapers give half a
million as a rough estimate of the loss among the flocks in this province
alone. We have no reliable news from other parts of the island, only vague
rumours of the storm having been still more severe in the Province of
Otago, which lies to the south, and would be right in its track; the only
thing which all are agreed in saying is, that there never has been such a
storm before, for the Maories are strong in weather traditions, and though
they prophesied this one, it is said they have no legend of anything like
it ever having happened.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XXI: Wild cattle hunting in the Kowai Bush. </h2>
<p>Mount Torlesse, October 1867. We are staying for a week at a charming
little white cottage covered with roses and honeysuckles, nestled under
the shadow of this grand mountain, to make some expeditions after wild
cattle in the great Kowai Bush. I am afraid that it does not sound a very
orderly and feminine occupation, but I enjoy it thoroughly, and have
covered myself with glory and honour by my powers of walking all day.</p>
<p>We have already spent three long happy days in the Bush, and although they
have not resulted in much slaughter of our big game, still I for one am
quite as well pleased as if we had returned laden with as many beeves as
used to come in from a border foray. I am not going to inflict an account
of each expedition on you; one will serve to give an idea of all, for
though there is no monotony in Nature, it may chance that frequent
descriptions of her become so, and this I will not risk.</p>
<p>Our ride over here was a sufficiently ridiculous affair, owing to the
misbehaviour of the pack-horse, for it was impossible upon this occasion
to manage with as little luggage as usual, so we arranged to take a
good-sized carpet-bag (a most unheard-of luxury), and on each side of it
was to be slung a rifle and a gun, and smaller bags of bullets, shot, and
powder-flasks, disposed to the best advantage on the pack-saddle. This was
all very well in theory, but when it came to the point, the proper steady
old horse who was to bear the pack was not forthcoming! He had taken it
into his head to go on a visit to a neighbouring run, so the only
available beast was a young chestnut of most uncertain temper. The process
of saddling him was a long one, as he objected to each item of his load as
soon as it was put on, especially to the guns; but F—— was
very patient, and took good care to tie and otherwise fasten everything so
that it was impossible for "Master Tucker" (called, I suppose, after the
immortal Tommy) to get rid of his load by either kicking or plunging. At
last we mounted and rode by a bridle-path among the hills for some twelve
miles or so, then across half-a-dozen miles of plain, and finally we
forded a river. The hill-track was about as bad as a path could be, with
several wide jumps across creeks at the bottom of the numerous deep
ravines, or gullies as we call them. F—— rode first—for
we could only go in single file—with the detestable Tucker's bridle
over his arm; then came the chestnut, with his ears well back, and his
eyes all whites, in his efforts to look at his especial aversion, the
guns; he kicked all the way down the many hills, and pulled back in the
most aggravating manner at each ascent, and when we came to a creek sat
down on his tail, refusing to stir. My position was a most trying one; the
track was so bad that I would fain have given my mind entirely to my own
safety, but instead of this all my attention was centred on Tucker the
odious. When we first started I expressed to F—— my fear that
Tucker would fairly drag him off his own saddle, and he admitted that it
was very likely, adding, "You must flog him." This made me feel that it
entirely depended on my efforts whether F—— was to be killed
or not, so I provided myself with a small stock-whip in addition to my own
little riding-whip, and we set off. From the first yard Tucker objected to
go, but there were friendly sticks to urge him on; however, we soon got
beyond the reasonable limits of help, and I tried desperately to impress
upon Tucker that I was going to be very severe: for this purpose I
flourished my stock-whip in a way that drove my own skittish mare nearly
frantic, and never touched Tucker, whom F—— was dragging along
by main force. At last I gave up the stock-whip, with its unmanageable
three yards of lash, and dropped it on the track, to be picked up as we
came home. I now tried to hit Tucker with my horse-whip, but he flung his
heels up in Helen's face the moment I touched him. I was in perfect
despair, very much afraid of a sudden swerve on my mare's part sending us
both down the precipice, and in equal dread of seeing F——
pulled off his saddle by Tucker's suddenly planting his fore-feet firmly
together: F—— himself, with the expression of a martyr,
looking round every now and then to say, "Can't you make him come on?" and
I hitting wildly and vainly, feeling all the time that I was worse than
useless. At last the bright idea occurred to me to ride nearly alongside
of the fiendish Tucker, but a little above him on the hill, so as to be
able to strike him fairly without fear of his heels. As far as Tucker was
concerned this plan answered perfectly, for he soon found out he had to
go; but Helen objected most decidedly to being taken off the comparative
safety of the track and made to walk on a slippery, sloping hill, where
she could hardly keep her feet; however, we got on much faster this way.
Oh, how tired I was of striking Tucker! I don't believe I hurt him much,
but I felt quite cruel. When we came to the plain, I begged F——
to let me lead him; so we changed, and there was no holding back on the
chestnut's part then; it must have been like the grass and the stones in
the fable. I never was more thankful than when that ride was over, though
its disagreeables were soon forgotten in the warm welcome we received from
our bachelor hosts, and the incessant discussions about the next day's
excursion.</p>
<p>We had finished breakfast by seven o'clock the following morning, and were
ready to start. Of course the gentlemen were very fussy about their
equipments, and hung themselves all over with cartridges and bags of
bullets and powder-flasks; then they had to take care that their
tobacco-pouches and match-boxes were filled; and lastly, each carried a
little flask of brandy or sherry, in case of being lost and having to camp
out. I felt quite unconcerned, having only my flask with cold tea in it to
see about, and a good walking-stick was easily chosen. My costume may be
described as uncompromising, for it had been explained to me that there
were no paths but real rough bush walking; so I dispensed with all little
feminine adornments even to the dearly-loved chignon, tucked my hair away
as if I was going to put on a bathing-cap, and covered it with a Scotch
bonnet. The rest of my toilette must have been equally shocking to the
eyes of taste, and I have reason to believe the general effect most
hideous; but one great comfort was, no one looked at me, they were all too
much absorbed in preparations for a great slaughter, and I only came at
all upon sufferance; the unexpressed but prevailing dread, I could plainly
see, was that I should knock up and become a bore, necessitating an early
return home; but I knew better!</p>
<p>An American waggon and some ponies were waiting to take the whole party to
the entrance of the bush, about four miles off, and, in spite of having to
cross a rough river-bed, which is always a slow process, it did not take
us very long to reach our first point. Here we dismounted, just at the
edge of the great dense forest, and, with as little delay as possible in
fine arrangements, struck into a path or bullock-track, made for about
three miles into the bush for the convenience of dragging out the felled
trees by ropes or chains attached to bullocks; they are not placed upon a
waggon, so you may easily imagine the state the track was in, ploughed up
by huge logs of timber dragged on the ground, and by the bullocks' hoofs
besides. It was a mere slough with deep holes of mud in it, and we
scrambled along its extreme edge, chiefly trusting to the trees on each
side, which still lay as they had been felled, the men not considering
them good enough to remove. At last we came to a clearing, and I quite
despair of making you understand how romantic and lovely this open space
in the midst of the tall trees looked that beautiful spring morning. I
involuntarily thought of the descriptions in "Paul and Virginia," for the
luxuriance of the growth was quite tropical. For about two acres the trees
had been nearly all felled, only one or two giants remaining; their stumps
were already hidden by clematis and wild creepers of other kinds, or by a
sort of fern very like the hart's-tongue, which will only grow on the bark
of trees, and its glossy leaves made an exquisite contrast to the rough
old root. The "bushmen"—as the men who have bought twenty-acre
sections and settled in the bush are called—had scattered English
grass-seed all over the rich leafy mould, and the ground was covered with
bright green grass, kept short and thick by a few tame goats browsing
about. Before us was the steep bank of the river Waimakiriri, and a few
yards from its edge stood a picturesque gable-ended little cottage
surrounded by a rustic fence, which enclosed a strip of garden gay with
common English spring flowers, besides more useful things, potatoes, etc.
The river was about two hundred yards broad just here, and though it
foamed below us, we could also see it stretching away in the distance
almost like a lake, till a great bluff hid it from our eyes. Overhead the
trees were alive with flocks of wild pigeons, ka-kas, parroquets, and
other birds, chattering and twittering incessantly and as we stood on the
steep bank and looked down, I don't think a minute passed without a brace
of wild ducks flying past, grey, blue, and Paradise. These latter are the
most beautiful plumaged birds I ever saw belonging to the duck tribe, and,
when young, are very good eating, quite as delicate as the famous
canvas-back. This sight so excited our younger sportsmen that they
scrambled down the high precipice, followed by a water-spaniel, and in
five minutes had bagged as many brace. We could not give them any more
time, for it was past nine o'clock, and we were all eager to start on the
serious business of the day; but before we left, the mistress of this
charming "bush-hut" insisted on our having some hot coffee and scones and
wild honey, a most delicious second breakfast. There was a pretty little
girl growing up, and a younger child, both the picture of health; the only
drawback seemed to be the mosquitoes; it was not very lonely, for one or
two other huts stood in clearings adjoining, and furnished us with three
bushmen as guides and assistants. I must say, they were the most
picturesque of the party, being all handsome men, dressed in red flannel
shirts and leathern knickerbockers and gaiters; they had fine beards, and
wore "diggers' hats," a head-dress of American origin—a sort of
wide-awake made of plush, capable of being crushed into any shape, and
very becoming. All were armed with either rifle or gun, and one carried an
axe and a coil of rope; another had a gun such as is seldom seen out of an
arsenal; it was an old flint lock, but had been altered to a percussion;
its owner was very proud of it, not so much for its intrinsic beauty,
though it once had been a costly and splendid weapon and was elaborately
inlaid with mother-of-pearl, but because it had belonged to a former Duke
of Devonshire. In spite of its claims to consideration on this head as
well as its own beauty, we all eyed it with extreme disfavour on account
of a peculiarity it possessed of not going off when it was intended to do
so, but about five minutes afterwards.</p>
<p>It was suggested to me very politely that I might possibly prefer to
remain behind and spend the day in this picturesque spot, but this offer I
declined steadily; I think the bushmen objected to my presence more than
any one else, as they really meant work, and dreaded having to turn back
for a tired "female" (they never spoke of me by any other term). At last
all the information was collected about the probable whereabouts of the
wild cattle—it was so contradictory, that it must have been
difficult to arrange any plan by it,—and we started. A few hundred
yards took us past the clearings and into the very heart of the forest. We
had left the sun shining brightly overhead; here it was all a "great green
gloom." I must describe to you the order in which we marched. First came
two of the most experienced "bush-hands," who carried a tomahawk or light
axe with which to clear the most cruel of the brambles away, and to notch
the trees as a guide to us on our return; and also a compass, for we had
to steer for a certain point, the bearings of which we knew—of
course the procession was in Indian file: next to these pioneers walked,
very cautiously, almost on tiptoe, four of our sportsmen; then I came; and
four or five others, less keen or less well armed, brought up the rear. I
may here confess that I endured in silence agonies of apprehension for my
personal safety all day. It was so dreadful to see a bramble or wild
creeper catch in the lock of the rifle before me, and to reflect that,
unless its owner was very careful, it might "go off of its own accord,"
and to know that I was exposed to a similar danger from those behind.</p>
<p>We soon got on the fresh tracks of some cows, and proceeded most
cautiously and silently; but it could hardly be called walking, it was
alternately pushing through dense undergrowth, crawling beneath, or
climbing over, high barricades made by fallen trees. These latter
obstacles I found the most difficult, for the bark was so slippery; and
once, when with much difficulty I had scrambled up a pile of <i>debris</i>
at least ten feet high, I incautiously stepped on some rotten wood at the
top, and went through it into a sort of deep pit, out of which it was very
hard to climb. On comparing notes afterwards, we found, that although we
had walked without a moment's cessation for eleven hours during the day, a
pedometer only gave twenty-two miles as the distance accomplished. Before
we had been in the bush half an hour our faces were terribly scratched and
bleeding, and so were the gentlemen's hands; my wrists also suffered, as
my gauntlets would not do their duty and lie flat. There were myriads of
birds around us, all perfectly tame; many flew from twig to twig,
accompanying us with their little pert heads on one side full of
curiosity; the only animals we saw were some wild sheep looking very
disreputable with their long tails and torn, trailing fleeces of six or
seven years' growth. There are supposed to be some hundreds of these in
the bush who have strayed into it years ago, when they were lambs, from
neighbouring runs. The last man in the silent procession put a match into
a dead tree every here and there, to serve as a torch to guide us back in
the dark; but this required great judgment for fear of setting the whole
forest on fire: the tree required to be full of damp decay, which would
only smoulder and not blaze. We intended to steer for a station on the
other side of a narrow neck of the Great Bush, ten miles off, as nearly as
we could guess, but we made many detours after fresh tracks. Once these
hoof-marks led us to the brink of such a pretty creek, exactly like a
Scotch burn, wide and noisy, tumbling down from rock to rock, but not very
deep. After a whispered consultation, it was determined to follow up this
creek to a well-known favourite drinking-place of the cattle, but it was
easier walking in the water than on the densely-grown banks, so all the
gentlemen stepped in one after another. I hesitated a moment with one's
usual cat-like antipathy to wet feet, when a stalwart bushman approached,
with rather a victimised air and the remark: "Ye're heavy, nae doot, to
carry." I was partly affronted at this prejudgment of the case, and partly
determined to show that I was equal to the emergency, for I immediately
jumped into the water, frightening myself a good deal by the tremendous
splash I made, and meeting reproving glances; and nine heads were shaken
violently at me.</p>
<p>Nothing could be more beautiful than the winding banks of this creek,
fringed with large ferns in endless variety; it was delightful to see the
sun and sky once more overhead, but I cannot say that it was the easiest
possible walking, and I soon found out that the cleverest thing to do was
to wade a little way behind the shortest gentleman of the party, for when
he disappeared in a hole I knew it in time to avoid a similar fate;
whereas, as long as I persisted in stalking solemnly after my own tall
natural protector, I found that I was always getting into difficulties in
unexpectedly deep places. I saw the bushmen whispering together, and
examining the rocks in some places, but I found on inquiry that their
thoughts were occupied at the moment by other ideas than sport; one of
them had been a digger, and was pronouncing an opinion that this creek was
very likely to prove a "home of the gold" some day. There is a strong
feeling prevalent that gold will be found in great quantities all over the
island. At this time of the year the water is very shallow, but the stream
evidently comes down with tremendous force in the winter; and they talk of
having "found the colour" (of gold) in some places. We proceeded in this
way for about three miles, till we reached a beautiful, clear, deep pool,
into which the water fell from a height in a little cascade; the banks
here were well trodden, and the hoof-prints quite recent; great excitement
was caused by hearing a distant lowing, but after much listening, in true
Indian fashion, with the ear to the ground, everybody was of a different
opinion as to the side from whence the sound proceeded, so we determined
to keep on our original course; the compass was once more produced, and we
struck into a dense wood of black birch.</p>
<p>Ever since we left the clearing from which the start was made, we had
turned our backs on the river, but about three o'clock in the afternoon we
came suddenly on it again, and stood on the most beautiful spot I ever saw
in my life. We were on the top of a high precipice, densely wooded to the
water's edge. Some explorers in bygone days must have camped here, for
half-a-dozen trees were felled, and the thick brush-wood had been burnt
for a few yards, just enough to let us take in the magnificent view before
and around us. Below roared and foamed, among great boulders washed down
from the cliff, the Waimakiriri; in the middle of it lay a long narrow
strip of white shingle, covered with water in the winter floods, but now
shining like snow in the bright sunlight. Beyond this the river flowed as
placidly as a lake, in cool green depths, reflecting every leaf of the
forest on the high bank or cliff opposite. To our right it stretched away,
with round headlands covered with timber running down in soft curves to
the water. But on our left was the most perfect composition for a picture
in the foreground a great reach of smooth water, except just under the
bank we stood on, where the current was strong and rapid; a little
sparkling beach, and a vast forest rising up from its narrow border,
extending over chain after chain of hills, till they rose to the glacial
region, and then the splendid peaks of the snowy range broke the deep blue
sky line with their grand outlines.</p>
<p>All this beauty would have been almost too oppressive, it was on such a
large scale and the solitude was so intense, if it had not been for the
pretty little touch of life and movement afforded by the hut belonging to
the station we were bound for. It was only a rough building, made of slabs
of wood with cob between; but there was a bit of fence and the corner of a
garden and an English grass paddock, which looked about as big as a
pocket-handkerchief from where we stood. A horse or two and a couple of
cows were tethered near, and we could hear the bark of a dog. A more
complete hermitage could not have been desired by Diogenes himself, and
for the first time we felt ashamed of invading the recluse in such a
formidable body, but ungrudging, open-handed hospitality is so universal
in New Zealand that we took courage and began our descent. It really was
like walking down the side of a house, and no one could stir a step
without at least one arm round a tree. I had no gun to carry, so I clung
frantically with both arms to each stem in succession. The steepness of
the cliff was the reason we could take in all the beauty of the scene
before us, for the forest was as thick as ever; but we could see over the
tops of the trees, as the ground dropped sheer down, almost in a straight
line from the plateau we had been travelling on all day. As soon as we
reached the shingle, on which we had to walk for a few hundred yards, we
bethought ourselves of our toilettes; the needle and thread I had brought
did good service in making us more presentable. We discovered, however,
that our faces were a perfect network of fine scratches, some of which <i>would</i>
go on bleeding, in spite of cold-water applications. Our boots were nearly
dry; and my petticoat, short as it was, proved to be the only damp
garment: this was the fault of my first jump into the water. We put the
least scratched and most respectable-looking member of the party in the
van, and followed him, amid much barking of dogs, to the low porch; and
after hearing a cheery "Come in," answering our modest tap at the door, we
trooped in one after the other till the little room was quite full. I
never saw such astonishment on any human face as on that of the poor
master of the house, who could not stir from his chair by the fire, on
account of a bad wound in his leg from an axe. There he sat quite
helpless, a moment ago so solitary, arid now finding himself the centre of
a large, odd-looking crowd of strangers. He was a middle-aged Scotchman,
probably of not a very elevated position in life, and had passed many
years in this lonely spot, and yet he showed himself quite equal to the
occasion.</p>
<p>After that first uncontrollable look of amazement he did the honours of
his poor hut with the utmost courtesy and true good-breeding. His only
apology was for being unable to rise from his arm-chair (made out of half
a barrel and an old flour-sack by the way); he made us perfectly welcome,
took it for granted we were hungry—hunger is a very mild word to
express my appetite, for one—called by a loud coo-ee to his man
Sandy, to whom he gave orders that the best in the house should be put
before us, and then began to inquire by what road we had come, what sport
we had, etc., all in the nicest way possible. I never felt more awkward in
my life than when I stooped to enter that low doorway, and yet in a minute
I was quite at my ease again; but of the whole party I was naturally the
one who puzzled him the most. In the first place, I strongly suspect that
he had doubts as to my being anything but a boy in a rather long kilt; and
when this point was explained, he could not understand what a "female," as
he also called me, was doing on a rough hunting expedition. He
particularly inquired more than once if I had come of my own free will,
and could not understand what pleasure I found in walking so far. Indeed
he took it so completely for granted that I must be exhausted, that he
immediately began to make plans for F—— and me to stop there
all night, offering to give up his "bunk" (some slabs of wood made into a
shelf, with a tussock mattress and a blanket), and to sleep himself in his
arm-chair.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Sandy was preparing our meal. There was an open hearth
with a fine fire, and a big black kettle hanging over it by a hook
fastened somewhere up the chimney. As soon as this boiled he went to a
chest, or rather locker, and brought a double-handful of tea, which he
threw into the kettle; then he took from a cupboard the biggest loaf, of
bread I ever saw—a huge thing, which had been baked in a camp-oven—and
flapped it down on the table with a bang; next he produced a tin milk-pan,
and returned to the cupboard to fetch out by the shank-bone a mutton-ham,
which he placed in the milk-dish: a bottle of capital whisky was
forthcoming from the same place; a little salt on one newspaper, and
brown, or rather <i>black</i>, sugar on another, completed the
arrangements, and we were politely told by Sandy to "wire in,"—digger's
phraseology for an invitation to commence, which we did immediately, as
soon as we could make an arrangement about the four tin plates and three
pannikins. I had one all to myself, but the others managed by twos and
threes to each plate. I never had a better luncheon in my life; everything
was excellent in its way, and we all possessed what we are told is the
best sauce. Large as the supplies were, we left hardly anything, and the
more we devoured the more pleased our host seemed. There were no chairs;
we sat on logs of trees rudely chopped into something like horse-blocks,
but to tired limbs which had known no rest from six hours' walking they
seemed delightful. After we had finished our meal, the gentlemen went
outside to have half a pipe before setting off again; they dared not smoke
whilst we were after the cattle, for fear of their perceiving some unusual
smell; and I remained for ten minutes with Mr——. I found that
he was very fond of reading; his few books were all of a good stamp, but
he was terribly hard-up for anything which he had not read a hundred times
over. I hastily ran over the names of some books of my own, which I
offered to lend him for as long a time as he liked: and we made elaborate
plans for sending them, of my share in which I took a memorandum. He
seemed very grateful at the prospect of having anything new, especially
now that he was likely to be laid up for some weeks, and I intend to make
every effort to give him this great pleasure as soon as possible.</p>
<p>We exchanged the most hearty farewells when the time of parting came, and
our host was most earnest in his entreaties to us to remain; but it was a
question of getting out of the bush before dusk, so we could not delay. He
sent Sandy to guide us by a rather longer but easier way than climbing up
the steep cliff to the place where the little clearing at its edge which I
have mentioned had been made; and we dismissed our guide quite happy with
contributions from all the tobacco-pouches, for no one had any money with
him. We found our way back again by the notches on the trees as long as
the light lasted, and when it got too dark to see them easily, the
smouldering trunks guided us, and we reached the clearing from which we
started in perfect safety. Good Mrs. D—— had a bountiful tea
ready; she was much concerned at our having yet some three miles of bad
walking before we could reach the hut on the outskirts of the bush, where
we had left the trap and the ponies. When we got to this point there was
actually another and still more sumptuous meal set out for us, to which,
alas! we were unable to do any justice; and then we found our way to the
station across the flat, down a steep cutting, and through the river-bed,
all in the dark and cold. We had supper as soon as we reached home,
tumbling into bed as early as might be afterwards for such a sleep as you
Londoners don't know anything about.</p>
<p>I have only described one expedition to you, and that the most
unsuccessful, as far as killing anything goes; but my hunting instincts
only lead me to the point of reaching the game; when it comes to that, I
always try to save its life, and if this can't be done, I retire to a
distance and stop my ears; indeed, if very much over-excited, I can't help
crying. Consequently, I enjoy myself much more when we don't kill
anything; and, on the other occasions, I never could stop and see even the
shot fired which was to bring a fine cow or a dear little calf down, but
crept away as far as ever I could, and muffled my head in my jacket. The
bushmen liked this part of the performance the best, I believe, and acted
as butchers very readily, taking home a large joint each to their huts, a
welcome change after the eternal pigeons, ka-kas, and wild ducks on which
they live.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XXII: The exceeding joy of "burning." </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, December 1867. I am quite sorry that the season for setting
fire to the long grass, or, as it is technically called, "burning the
run," is fairly over at last. It has been later than usual this year, on
account of the snow having lain such an unusual time on the ground and
kept the grass damp. Generally September is the earliest month in which it
begins, and November the latest for it to end; but this year the shady
side of "Flagpole" was too moist to take fire until December.</p>
<p>It is useless to think of setting out on a burning expedition unless there
is a pretty strong nor'-wester blowing; but it must not be <i>too</i>
violent, or the flames will fly over the grass, just scorching it instead
of making "a clean burn." But when F—— pronounces the wind to
be just right, and proposes that we should go to some place where the
grass is of two, or, still better, three years' growth, then I am indeed
happy. I am obliged to be careful not to have on any inflammable
petticoats, even if it is quite a warm day, as they are very dangerous;
the wind will shift suddenly perhaps as, I am in the very act of setting a
tussock a-blaze, and for half a second I find myself in the middle of the
flames. F—— generally gets his beard well singed, and I have
nearly lost my eyelashes more than once. We each provide ourselves with a
good supply of matches, and on the way we look out for the last year's
tall blossom of those horrid prickly bushes called "Spaniards," or a
bundle of flax-sticks, or, better than all, the top of a dead and dry
Ti-ti palm. As soon as we come to the proper spot, and F—— has
ascertained that no sheep are in danger of being made into roast mutton
before their time, we begin to light our line of fire, setting one large
tussock blazing, lighting our impromptu torches at it, and then starting
from this "head-centre," one to the right and the other to the left,
dragging the blazing sticks along the grass. It is a very exciting
amusement, I assure you, and the effect is beautiful, especially as it
grows dusk and the fires are racing up the hills all around us. Every now
and then they meet with a puff of wind, which will perhaps strike a great
wall of fire rushing up-hill as straight as a line, and divide it into two
fiery horns like a crescent; then as the breeze changes again, the tips of
flame will gradually approach each other till they meet, and go on again
in a solid mass of fire.</p>
<p>If the weather has been very dry for some time and the wind is high, we
attempt to burn a great flax swamp, perhaps, in some of the flats. This
makes a magnificent bonfire when once it is fairly started, but it is more
difficult to light in the first instance, as you have to collect the dead
flax-leaves and make a little fire of them under the big green bush in
order to coax it to blaze up: but it crackles splendidly; indeed it sounds
as if small explosions were going on sometimes. But another disadvantage
of burning a swamp is, that there are deep holes every yard or two, into
which I always tumble in my excitement, or in getting out of the way of a
flax-bush which has flared up just at the wrong moment, and is threatening
to set me on fire also. These holes are quite full of water in the winter,
but now they contain just enough thin mud to come in over the tops of my
boots; so I do not like stepping into one every moment. We start numerous
wild ducks and swamp-hens, and perhaps a bittern or two, by these
conflagrations. On the whole, I like burning the hill-sides better than
the swamp—you get a more satisfactory blaze with less trouble; but I
sigh over these degenerate days when the grass is kept short and a third
part of a run is burned regularly ever spring, and long for the good old
times of a dozen years ago, when the tussocks were six feet high. What a
blaze they must have made! The immediate results of our expeditions are
vast tracts of perfectly black and barren country, looking desolate and
hideous to a degree hardly to be imagined; but after the first spring
showers a beautiful tender green tint steals over the bare hill-sides, and
by and by they are a mass of delicious young grass, and the especial
favourite feeding-place of the ewes and lambs. The day after a good burn
thousands of sea-gulls flock to the black ground. Where they spring from I
cannot tell, as I never see one at any other time, and their hoarse,
incessant cry is the first sign you have of their arrival. They hover over
the ground, every moment darting down, for some insect. They cannot find
much else but roasted lizards and, grasshoppers, for I have never seen a
caterpillar in New Zealand.</p>
<p>In the height of the burning season last month I had Alice S——
to stay with me for two or three weeks, and to my great delight I found
our tastes about fires agreed exactly, and we both had the same grievance—that
we never were allowed to have half enough of it; so we organized the most
delightful expeditions together. We used to have a quiet old station-horse
saddled, fasten the luncheon-basket to the pommel with materials for a
five o'clock tea, and start off miles away to the back of the run, about
three o'clock in the afternoon, having previously bribed the shepherd to
tell us where the longest grass was to be found—and this he did very
readily, as our going saved him the trouble of a journey thither, and he
was not at all anxious for more work than he could help. We used to ride
alternately, till we got to a deserted shepherd's hut in such a lovely
gully, quite at the far end of the run! Here we tied up dear quiet old
Jack to the remnants of the fence, leaving him at liberty to nibble a
little grass. We never took off the saddle after the first time, for upon
that occasion we found that our united strength was insufficient to girth
it on again properly, and we made our appearance at home in the most
ignominious fashion—Alice leading Jack, and I walking by his side
holding the saddle <i>on</i>. Whenever we attempted to buckle the girths,
this artful old screw swelled himself out with such a long breath that it
was impossible to pull the strap to the proper hole; we could not even get
it tight enough to stay steady, without slipping under him at every step.
However, this is a digression, and I must take you back to the scene of
the fire, and try to make you understand how delightful it was. Alice said
that what made it so fascinating to her was a certain sense of its being
mischief, and a dim feeling that we might get into a scrape. I don't think
I ever stopped to analyse my sensations; fright was the only one I was
conscious of, and yet I liked it so much. When after much consultation—in
which I always deferred to Alice's superior wisdom and experience—we
determined on our line of fire, we set to work vigorously, and the great
thing was to see who could make the finest blaze. I used to feel very
envious if my fire got into a bare patch, where there were more rocks than
tussocks, and languished, whilst Alice's was roaring and rushing up a
hill. We always avoided burning where a grove of the pretty Ti-ti palms
grew; but sometimes there would be one or two on a hill-side growing by
themselves, and then it was most beautiful to see them burn. Even before
the flames reached them their long delicate leaves felt the wind of the
fire and shivered piteously; then the dry old ones at the base of the stem
caught the first spark like tinder, and in a second the whole palm was in
a blaze, making a sort of heart to the furnace, as it had so much more
substance than the grass. For a moment or two the poor palm would bend and
sway, tossing its leaves like fiery plumes in the air, and then it was
reduced to a black stump, and the fire swept on up the hill.</p>
<p>The worst of it all was that we never knew when to leave off and come
home. We would pause for half an hour and boil our little kettle, and have
some tea and cake, and then go on again till quite late, getting well
scolded when we reached home at last dead-tired and as black as little
chimney-sweeps. One evening F—— was away on a visit of two
nights to a distant friend, and Alice and I determined on having splendid
burns in his absence; so we made our plans, and everything was favourable,
wind and all. We enjoyed ourselves very much, but if Mr. U——
had not come out to look for us at ten o'clock at night, and traced us by
our blazing track, we should have had to camp out, for we had no idea
where we were, or that we had wandered so many miles from home; nor had we
any intention of returning just yet. We were very much ashamed of
ourselves upon that occasion, and took care to soften the story
considerably before it reached F——'s ears the next day.</p>
<p>However much I may rejoice at nor'-westers in the early spring as aids to
burning the run, I find them a great hindrance to my attempts at a lawn.
Twice have we had the ground carefully dug up and prepared; twice has it
been sown with the best English seed for the purpose, at some considerable
expense; then has come much toil on the part of F—— and Mr. U——
with a heavy garden-roller; and the end of all the trouble has been that a
strong nor'-wester has blown both seed and soil away, leaving only the
hard un-dug (I wonder whether there is such a word) ground. I could
scarcely believe that it really was all "clean gone," as children say,
until a month or two after the first venture, when I had been straining my
eyes and exercising my imagination all in vain to discover a blade where
it ought to have been, but had remarked in one of my walks an irregular
patch of nice English grass about half a mile from the house down the
flat. I speculated for some time as to how it got there, and at last F——
was roused from his reverie, and said coolly, "Oh, that's your lawn!" When
this happens twice, it really becomes very aggravating: there are the
croquet things lying idle in the verandah year after year, and, as far as
I can see, they are likely to remain unused for ever.</p>
<p>Before I close my letter I must tell you of an adventure I have had with a
wild boar, which was really dangerous. F—— and another
gentleman were riding with me one afternoon in a very lonely gully at the
back of the run, when the dogs (who always accompany us) put up a large,
fierce, black, boar out of some thick flax-bushes. Of course the hunting
instinct, which all young Englishmen possess, was in full force instantly;
and in default of any weapon these two jumped off their horses and picked
up, out of the creek close by, the largest and heaviest stones they could
lift. I disapproved of the chase under the circumstances, but my timid
remonstrances were not even heard. The light riding-whips which each
gentleman carried were hastily given to me to hold, and in addition F——
thrust an enormous boulder into my lap, saying, "Now, this is to be my
second gun; so keep close to me." Imagine poor me, therefore, with all
three whips tucked under my left arm, whilst with my right I tried to keep
the big stone on my knee, Miss Helen all the time capering about, as she
always does when there is any excitement; and I feeling very unequal to
holding her back from joining in the chase too ardently, for she always
likes to be first everywhere, which is not at all my "sentiments." The
ground was as rough as possible; the creek winding about necessitated a
good jump every few yards; and the grass was so long and thick that it was
difficult to get through it, or to see any blind creeks or other pitfalls.
<i>Mem</i>. to burn this next spring.</p>
<p>The pig first turned to bay against a palm-tree, and soon disabled the
dogs. You cannot think what a formidable weapon a wild boar's tusk is—the
least touch of it cuts like a razor; and they are so swift in their jerks
of the head when at bay that in a second they will rip up both dogs and
horses: nor are they the least afraid of attacking a man on foot in
self-defence; but they seldom or ever strike the first blow. As soon as he
had disposed of both the dogs, who lay howling piteously and bleeding on
the ground, the boar made at full speed for the spur of a hill close by.
The pace was too good to last, especially up-hill; so the gentlemen soon
caught him up, and flung their stones at him, but they dared not bring
their valuable horses too near for fear of a wound which probably would
have lamed them for life; and a heavy, rock or stone is a very
unmanageable weapon. I was not therefore at all surprised to see that both
shots missed, or only very slightly grazed the pig; but what I confess to
being perfectly unprepared for was the boar charging violently down-hill
on poor unoffending me, with his head on one side ready for the fatal
backward jerk, champing and foaming as he came, with what Mr. Weller would
call his "vicked old eye" twinkling with rage. Helen could not realize the
situation at all. I tried to turn her, and so get out of the infuriated
brute's way; but no, she would press on to meet him and join the other
horses at the top of the hill. I had very little control over her, for I
was so laden with whips and stones that my hands were useless for the
reins. I knew I was in great danger, but at the moment I could only think
of my poor pretty mare lamed for life, or even perhaps killed on the spot.
I heard one wild shout of warning from above, and I knew the others were
galloping to my rescue; but in certainly less than half a minute from the
time the boar turned, he had reached me. I slipped the reins over my left
elbow, so as to leave my hands free, took my whip in my teeth (I had to
drop the others), and lifting the heavy stone with both my hands waited a
second till the boar was near enough, leaning well over on the right-hand
side of the saddle so as to see what he did. He made for poor Helen's near
fore-leg with his head well down, and I could hear his teeth gnashing.
Just as he touched her with a prick from his tusk like a stiletto and
before he could jerk his head back so as to rip the leg up, I flung my
small rock with all the strength I possessed crash on his head: but I
could not take a good aim; for the moment Helen felt the stab, she reared
straight up on her hind-legs, and as we were going up-hill, I had some
trouble to keep myself from slipping off over her tail. However, my rock
took some effect, for the pig was so stunned that he dropped on his knees,
and before he could recover himself Helen had turned round, still on her
hind-legs, as on a pivot, and was plunging and jumping madly down the
hill. I could not get back properly into my saddle, nor could I arrange
the reins; so I had to stick on anyhow. It was not a case of fine riding
at all; I merely clung like a monkey, and F——, who was coming
as fast as he could to me, said he expected to see me on the ground every
moment; but, however, I did not come off upon that occasion. Helen was
nearly beside herself with terror. I tried to pat her neck and soothe her,
but the moment she felt my hand she bounded as if I had struck her, and
shivered so much that I thought she must be injured; so the moment F——
could get near her I begged him to look at her fetlock. He led her down to
the creek, and washed the place, and examined it carefully, pronouncing,
to my great joy, that the tusk had hardly gone in at all—in fact had
merely pricked her—and that she was not in the least hurt. I could
hardly get the gentlemen to go to the assistance of the poor dogs, one of
which was very much hurt. Both F—— and Mr. B——
evidently thought I must have been "kilt intirely," for my situation
looked so critical at one moment that they could scarcely be persuaded
that neither Helen nor I were in the least hurt. I coaxed F——
that evening to write me a doggerel version of the story for the little
boys, which I send you to show them:—</p>
<p>St. Anne and the pig.<br/>
You've heard of St. George and the dragon,<br/>
Or seen them; and what can be finer,<br/>
In silver or gold on a flagon,<br/>
With Garrard or Hancock designer?<br/>
<br/>
Though we know very little about him<br/>
(Saints mostly are shrouded in mystery),<br/>
Britannia can't well do without him,<br/>
He sets off her shillings and history.<br/>
<br/>
And from truth let such tales be defended,<br/>
Bards at least should bestow them their blessing,<br/>
As a rich sort of jewel suspended<br/>
On History when she's done dressing.<br/>
<br/>
Some would have her downstairs to the present,<br/>
In plain facts fresh from critical mangle;<br/>
But let the nymph make herself pleasant,<br/>
Here a bracelet, and there with a bangle<br/>
<br/>
Such as Bold Robin Hood or Red Riding,<br/>
Who peasant and prince have delighted,<br/>
Despite of all social dividing,<br/>
And the times of their childhood united.<br/>
<br/>
Shall New Zealand have never a fable,<br/>
A rhyme to be sung by the nurses,<br/>
A romance of a famous Round Table,<br/>
A "Death of Cock Robin" in verses?<br/>
<br/>
Or shall not a scribe be found gracious<br/>
With pen and with parchment, inditing<br/>
And setting a-sail down the spacious<br/>
Deep day stream some suitable writing;<br/>
<br/>
Some action, some name so heroic<br/>
That its sound shall be death to her foemen,<br/>
And make her militia as stoic<br/>
As St. George made the Cressy crossbowmen;<br/>
<br/>
A royal device for her banners,<br/>
A reverse for her coinage as splendid,<br/>
An example of primitive manners<br/>
When all their simplicity's ended?<br/>
<br/>
Here it is, ye isles Antipodean!<br/>
Leave Britain her great Cappadocian;<br/>
I'll chant you a latter-day paean,<br/>
And sing you a saint for devotion,<br/>
<br/>
Who on horseback slew also a monster,<br/>
Though armed with no sharp lance to stab it,<br/>
Though no helmet or hauberk ensconced her,<br/>
But only a hat and a habit.<br/>
<br/>
This dame, for her bravery sainted,<br/>
Set up for all times' adoration,<br/>
With her picture in poetry painted,<br/>
Was a lady who lived on a station.<br/>
<br/>
Her days—to proceed with the story<br/>
In duties domestic dividing,<br/>
But, or else she had never won glory,<br/>
She now and then went out a-riding.<br/>
It chanced, with two knights at her stirrup,<br/>
She swept o'er the grass of the valleys,<br/>
Heard the brooks run; and heard the birds chirrup,<br/>
When a boar from the flax-bushes sallies.<br/>
<br/>
The cavaliers leaped from their horses;<br/>
As for weapons, that day neither bore them;<br/>
So they chose from the swift watercourses<br/>
Heavy boulders, and held them before them.<br/>
<br/>
They gave one as well to the lady:<br/>
She took it, and placed it undaunted<br/>
On the pommel, and balanced it steady,<br/>
While they searched where the animal haunted.<br/>
<br/>
A bowshot beyond her were riding<br/>
The knights, each alert with his missile,<br/>
But in doubt where the pig went a-hiding,<br/>
For they had not kept sight of his bristle.<br/>
<br/>
When—the tale needs but little enlarging<br/>
One turned round by chance on his courser;<br/>
To his horror, the monster was charging<br/>
At the lady, as if to unhorse her.<br/>
<br/>
But his fears for her safety were idle,<br/>
No heart of a hero beat stouter:<br/>
She poised the stone, gathered her bridle—<br/>
A halo, 'tis said, shone about her.<br/>
<br/>
With his jaws all extended and horrid,<br/>
Fierce and foaming, the brute leapt to gore her,<br/>
When she dropped the rock full on his forehead,<br/>
And lo! he fell dying before her.<br/>
<br/>
There he lay, bristling, tusky, and savage;<br/>
Such a mouth, as was long ago written;<br/>
Made Calydon lonely with ravage,<br/>
By such teeth young Adonis was bitten.<br/>
<br/>
Then praise to our new Atalanta,<br/>
Of the chase and of song spoils be brought her,<br/>
Whose skill and whose strength did not want a<br/>
Meleager to finish the slaughter.<br/>
<br/>
She is sung, and New Zealand shall take her,<br/>
Thrice blest to possess such a matron,<br/>
And give thanks to its first ballad-maker,<br/>
Who found it a saint for a patron.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XXIII: Concerning a great flood. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, February 1868. Since I last wrote to you we have been nearly
washed away, by all the creeks and rivers in the country overflowing their
banks! Christchurch particularly was in great danger from the chance of
the Waimakiriri returning to its old channel, in which case it would sweep
away the town. For several hours half the streets were under water, the
people going about in boats, and the Avon was spread out like a lake over
its banks for miles. The weather had been unusually sultry for some weeks,
and during the last five days the heat had been far greater, even in the
hills, than anyone could remember. It is often very hot indeed during the
mid-day hours in summer, but a hot night is almost unknown; and, at the
elevation we live, there are few evenings in the year when a wood-fire is
not acceptable after sunset; as for a blanket at night, that is seldom
left off even in the plains, and is certainly necessary in the hills.
Every one was anxiously looking for rain, as the grass was getting very
dry and the creeks low, and people were beginning to talk of an Australian
summer and to prophesy dismal things of a drought. On a Sunday night about
eleven o'clock we were all sauntering about out of doors, finding it too
hot to remain in the verandah; it was useless to think of going to bed;
and F—— and Mr. U—— agreed that some great change
in the weather was near. There was a strange stillness and oppression in
the air; the very animals had not gone to sleep, but all seemed as
restless and wakeful as we were. I remember we discussed the probability
of a severe earthquake, for the recent wave at St. Thomas's was in
everybody's mind. F—— and I had spent a few days in
Christchurch the week before. There was a regular low-fever epidemic
there, and, he had returned to the station feeling very unwell; but in
this country illness is so rare that one almost forgets that such a thing
exists, and we both attributed his seediness to the extraordinary heat.</p>
<p>When we were out of doors that Sunday evening, we noticed immense banks
and masses of clouds, but they were not in the quarter from whence our
usual heavy rain comes; and besides, in New Zealand clouds are more
frequently a sign of high wind than of rain. However, about midnight F——
felt so ill that he went in to bed, and we had scarcely got under shelter
when, after a very few premonitory drops, the rain came down literally in
sheets. Almost from the first F—— spoke of the peculiar and
different sound on the roof, but as he had a great deal of fever that
night, I was too anxious to notice anything but the welcome fact that the
rain had come at last, and too glad to hear it to be critical about the
sound it made in falling. I came out to breakfast alone, leaving F——
still ill, but the fever going off. The atmosphere was much lightened, but
the rain seemed like a solid wall of water falling fast and furiously; the
noise on the wooden roof was so great that we had to shout to each other
to make ourselves heard; and when I looked out I was astonished to see the
dimensions to which the ponds had. swollen. Down all the hill-sides new
creeks and waterfalls had sprung into existence during the night. As soon
as I had taken F—— his tea and settled down comfortably to
breakfast, I noticed that instead of Mr. U—— looking the
picture of bright good-humour, he wore a troubled and anxious countenance.
I immediately inquired if he had been out of doors that morning? Yes, he
had been to look at the horses in the stable. Well, I did not feel much
interest in them, for they were big enough to take care of themselves: so
I proceeded to ask if he had chanced to see anything of my fifty young
ducks or my numerous broods of chickens. Upon this question Mr. U——
looked still more unhappy and tried to turn the conversation, but my
suspicions were aroused and I persisted; so at last he broke to me, with
much precaution, that I was absolutely without a duckling or a chicken in
the world! They had been drowned in the night, and nothing was to be seen
but countless draggled little corpses, what Mr. Mantilini called "moist
unpleasant bodies," floating on the pond or whirling in the eddies of the
creek. That was not even the worst. Every one of my sitting hens was
drowned also, their nests washed away; so were the half-dozen beautiful
ducks, with some twelve or fourteen eggs under each. I felt angry with the
ducks, and thought they might have at any rate saved their own lives; but
nothing could alter the melancholy returns of the missing and dead. My
poultry-yard was, for all practical purposes, annihilated, just as it was
at its greatest perfection and the pride and joy of my heart. All that day
the rain descended steadily in torrents; there was not the slightest break
or variation in the downpour: it was as heavy as that of the Jamaica <i>seasons</i>
of May and October. F——'s fever left him at the end of twelve
hours, and he got up and came into the drawing-room; his first glance out
of the window, which commanded a view of the flat for two or three miles,
showed him how much the waters had risen since midnight; and he said that
in all the years he had known those particular creeks he had never seen
them so high: still I thought nothing of it. There was no cessation in the
rain for exactly twenty-four hours; but at midnight on Monday, just as
poor F—— was getting another attack of fever, it changed into
heavy, broken showers, with little pauses of fine drizzle between, and by
morning it showed signs of clearing, but continued at intervals till
midday. The effect was extraordinary, considering the comparatively short
time the real downpour had lasted. The whole flat was under water, the
creeks were flooded beyond their banks for half a mile or so on each side,
and the river Selwyn, which ran under some hills, bounding our view, was
spread out, forming an enormous lake. A very conspicuous object on these
opposite hills, which are between three and four miles distant, was a bold
cliff known by the name of the "White Rocks," and serving as a landmark to
all the countryside: we could hardly believe our eyes when we missed the
most prominent of these and could see only a great bare rent in the
mountain. The house was quite surrounded by water and stood on a small
island; it was impossible even to wade for more than a few yards beyond
the dry ground, for the water became quite deep and the current was
running fast. F——'s fever lasted its twelve hours; but I began
to be fidgety at the state of prostration it left him in, and when Tuesday
night brought a third and sharper attack, I determined to make him go to
town and see a doctor during his next interval of freedom from it.</p>
<p>Wednesday morning was bright and sunny, but the waters had not much
diminished: however, we knew every hour must lessen them, and I only
waited for F——'s paroxysm of fever to subside about mid-day to
send him off to Christchurch. I had exhausted my simple remedies,
consisting of a spoonful of sweet spirits of nitre and a little weak
brandy and water and did not think it right to let things go on in this
way without advice: he was so weak he could hardly mount his horse; indeed
he had to be fairly lifted on the old quiet station hack I have before
mentioned with such deep affection, dear old Jack. It was impossible for
him to go alone; so the ever-kind and considerate Mr. U——
offered to accompany him. This was the greatest comfort to me, though I
and my two maids would be left all alone during their absence: however,
that was much better than poor F—— going by himself in his
weak state. Six hours of sunshine had greatly abated the floods, and as
far as we could see the water was quite shallow now where it had
overflowed. I saw them set off therefore with a good hope of their
accomplishing the journey safely. Judge of my astonishment and horror
when, on going to see what the dogs were barking at, about two hours
later, I beheld F—— and Mr. U—— at the garden
gate, dripping wet up to their shoulders, but laughing very much. Of
course I immediately thought of F——'s fever, and made him come
in and change; and have some hot tea directly; but he would not go to bed
as I suggested, declaring that the shock of his unexpected cold bath, and
the excitement of a swim for his life, had done him all the good in the
world; and I may tell you at once; that it had completely cured him: he
ate well that evening, slept well, and had no return of his fever,
regaining his strength completely in a few days. So much for kill-or-cure
remedies!</p>
<p>It seems that as soon as they neared the first creek, with very high
banks, about a mile from the house, the water came up to the horses'
fetlocks, then to their knees, but still it was impossible to tell exactly
where the creek began, or rather, where its bank ended; they went very
cautiously, steering as well as they could for where they imagined the
cutting in the steep bank to be; but I suppose they did not hit it off
exactly, for suddenly they went plump into deep water and found themselves
whirling along like straws down a tremendous current. Jack was, however,
quite equal to the occasion; he never allows himself to be flurried or put
out by anything, and has, I imagine, been in nearly every difficulty
incident to New Zealand travelling. Instead, therefore, of losing his head
as Helen did (Mr. U—— was riding her), and striking out wildly
with her forelegs to the great danger of the other horse, Jack took it all
as a matter of course, and set himself to swim steadily down the stream,
avoiding the eddies as much as possible: he knew every yard of the bank,
and did not therefore waste his strength by trying to land in impossible
places, but kept a watchful eye for the easiest spot. F—— knew
the old horse so well that he let him have his head and guide himself,
only trying to avoid Helen's forelegs, which were often unpleasantly near;
his only fear was lest they should have to go so far before a landing was
possible that poor old Jack's strength might not hold out, for there is
nothing so fatiguing to a horse as swimming in a strong current with a
rider on his back, especially a heavy man. They were swept down for a long
distance, though it was impossible to guess exactly how far they had gone,
and F—— was getting very uneasy about a certain wire fence
which had been carried across the creek; they were rapidly approaching it,
and the danger was that the horses might suddenly find themselves
entangled in it, in which case the riders would very likely have been
drowned. F—— called to Mr. U——to get his feet free
from the stirrups and loosened his own; but he told me he was afraid lest
Mr. U—— should not hear him above the roaring of the water,
and so perhaps be dragged under water when the fence was reached. However,
Jack, knew all about it, and was not going to be drowned ignominiously in
a creek which would not have wet his hoofs to cross three days before. A
few yards from the fence he made one rush and a bound towards what seemed
only a clump of Tohi bushes, but they broke the force of the current and
gave him the chance he wanted, and he struggled up the high crumbling bank
more like a cat than a steady old screw. Helen would not be left behind,
and, with a good spur from Mr. U——, she followed Jack's
example, and they stood dripping and shivering in shallow water. Both the
horses were so <i>done</i> that F—— and Mr. U——
had to jump off instantly and loose the girths, turning them with their
nostrils to the wind. It was a very narrow escape, and the disagreeable
part of it was that they had scrambled out on the wrong side of the creek
and had to recross it to get home: however, they rode on to the next
stream, which looked so much more swollen and angry, that they gave up the
idea of going on to Christchurch that night, especially as they were wet
through to their chins, for both horses swam very low in the water, with
only their heads to be seen above it.</p>
<p>The next thing to be considered was how to get back to the house. It never
would do to risk taking the horses into danger again when they were so
exhausted; so they rode round by the homestead, crossed the creek higher
up, where it was much wider but comparatively shallow (if anything could
be called shallow just now), and came home over the hills. Good old Jack
had an extra feed of oats that evening, a reward to which he is by no
means insensible; and indeed it probably is the only one he cares for.</p>
<p>The Fates had determined, apparently, that I also should come in for my
share of watery adventures, for we had an engagement of rather long
standing to ride across the hills, and visit a friend's station about
twelve miles distant, and the day we had promised to go was rather more
than a week after F——'s attempted journey. In the meantime,
the waters had of course gone down considerably, and there was quite an
excitement in riding and walking about our own run, and seeing the changes
the flood had made, and the mischief it had done to the fencing;—this
was in process of being repaired. We lost very few sheep; they were all up
at the tops of the high hills, their favourite summer pasture.</p>
<p>I think I have told you that between us and Christchurch there is but one
river, a most peaceable and orderly stream, a perfect pattern to the
eccentric New Zealand rivers, which are so changeable and restless. Upon
this occasion, however, the Selwyn behaved quite as badly as any of its
fellows; it was not only flooded for miles, carrying away quantities of
fencing near its banks, and drowning confiding sheep suddenly, but at one
spot about four miles from us, just under the White Rocks, it came down
suddenly, like what Miss Ingelow calls "a mighty eygre," and deserted its
old timeworn bed for two new ones: and the worst of the story is that it
has taken a fancy to our road, swept away a good deal of it, breaking a
course for itself in quite a different place; so now, instead of one nice,
wide, generally shallow river to cross, about which there never has been
an evil report, we have two horrid mountain torrents of which we know
nothing: no one has been in yet to try their depth, or to find out the
best place at which to ford them, and it unfortunately happened that F——
and I were the pioneers. When we came to the first new channel, F——with
much care picked out what seemed the best place, and though it was a most
disagreeable bit of water to go through, still we managed it all right;
but when we came to the next curve, it was far worse. Here the river took
a sharp turn, and came tearing round a corner, the colour and consistency
of pea-soup, and making such a noise we could hardly hear ourselves speak
standing close together on the bank; once in the stream, of course it
would be hopeless to try to catch a word. I am ashamed to say that my
fixed idea was to turn back, and this I proposed without hesitation; but F——
has the greatest dislike to retracing his steps, and is disagreeably like
Excelsior in this respect; so he merely looked astonished at my want of
spirit, and proceeded very calmly to give me my directions, and the more
he impressed the necessity of coolness and caution upon me, the more I
quaked. He was to go over first, alone; I was to follow, having first
tucked my habit well up under my arm, and taken care that I was quite free
so as not to be entangled in any way <i>if</i> Helen should be swept away,
or if a boulder should come down with the stream, and knock her feet from
under her: I was not to be at all frightened (!), and I was to keep my
eyes fixed on him, and guide Helen's head exactly by the motion of his
hand. He plunged into the water as soon as he had issued these encouraging
directions; I saw him floundering in and out of several deep holes, and
presently he got safe to land, dripping wet; then he dismounted, tied Leo
to a flax bush, and took off his coat and big riding-boots,—I
thought, very naturally to dry them, but I should have been still more
alarmed, if possible, had I known that this was to prepare to be ready to
swim to my help in case of danger. As it was, my only hope was that Helen
might not like the look of the angry flood, and would refuse to go in;—how
I should have blessed her for such obstinacy!—but no, she was eager
to rejoin her stable companion, and plunged in without hesitation. I found
it much worse even than I dreaded; the water felt so resistless, as if it
<i>must</i> sweep me right out of the saddle; I should like to have
clutched Helen's mane or anything to have kept me on, but both hands were
wanted to hold the reins quite low down, one on each side of her withers,
so as to guide her exactly according to F——'s pilot-hand on
the opposite bank: steering implicitly by this I escaped the holes and
rocks which he had come against, and got over safely, but trembling, and
with chattering teeth. F——said, quite disdainfully, "You don't
mean to say you're really frightened?" So then I scolded him, rather
incoherently, and demanded to be praised for coming at all! I wrung my
habit out as well as I could, F—— poured the water out of his
boots, and we proceeded, first over a plain, and then to climb a high
steep hill. I wonder if you have any idea how disagreeable and dangerous
it is to go zigzag up the side of a mountain after such rain as we have
had. The soil was just like soap, nothing for the horses' hoofs to take
hold of, not a pebble or a tuft of grass; all had been washed away, and
only the slippery clay remained. As usual, F—— went first and
I followed, taking care not to keep below him, lest he and Leo should come
"slithering" (that is the only word for it) down upon me; but, alas, it
was Helen and I who slithered! Poor dear, all her legs seemed to fly from
under her at once, and she came down on her side and on my legs. I felt
the leaping-crutch snap, and found my left shoulder against the ground; I
let go the reins, and thought we had better part company, but found I
could not move for her weight; <i>she</i> struggled to get up, and we both
slipped down, down—down: there was no reason why we should not have
gone on to the bottom of the hill, when a friendly tussock afforded her an
instant's resting-place for her hind hoofs, and she scrambled to her feet
like a cat. I found myself still on her back; so I picked up my reins and
tried to pretend that I had never thought of getting off. F——
dared not stir from his "bad eminence;" so Helen and I wended our slippery
way up to him, and in answer to his horrified "Where is your habit?" I
found I was torn to ribbons; in fact, my skirt was little more than a
kilt, and a very short one too! What was to be done? We were only three or
four miles from our destination, so we pushed on, and at the last I
lingered behind, and made F—— go first and borrow a cloak or
shawl. You would have laughed if you had heard my pathetic adjurations to
him to be sure to bring it by himself. I was so afraid that some one else
would politely insist on accompanying him. But it was all right, though
even with this assistance it was very difficult to arrange matters so as
to be tolerably respectable. My hostess was shocked at my tattered, wet
plight, and dried me, and dressed me up till I was quite smart, and then
we had a very pleasant day, and, best of all, came home by a different
road, so as to avoid the slippery descent and the rivers in the dark; but
I still mourn for my habit!-it was my last. Three have disappeared, owing
to unfortunate accidents, this year, and now I am reduced to what can be
contrived out of a linsey dress.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XXIV: My only fall from horseback. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, June 1868. The autumn has passed away so quickly that I can
hardly believe the winter has reached us so soon—the last winter we
shall spend in New Zealand. I should like to have been able to boast, on
my return to England, that in three years' constant riding, on all sorts
of horses, good, bad, and indifferent, and over abominable roads, I had
escaped a fall; but not only have I had a very severe one, but it was from
my own favourite Helen, which is very trying to reflect upon. However, it
was not in the least her fault, or mine either; so she and I are still
perfectly good friends.</p>
<p>We had been spending two days up at Lake Coleridge, as a sort of farewell
visit, and on our way down again to Rockwood, a distance of about twenty
miles, we stopped to lunch, by invitation, at a station midway. There was
so much to be seen at this place that we loitered much longer than was
prudent in the short days, and by the time we had thoroughly inspected a
beautiful new wool-shed with all the latest improvements (from which F——
could hardly tear himself away), the fish-ponds elaborately arranged for
the reception of the young trout expected from Tasmania and the charming
garden well sheltered by a grove of large wattle-trees, it was growing
dusk, and we prepared to push on as fast as possible; for nothing is more
disagreeable than being caught in the dark on a New Zealand track, with
its creeks and swamps and wire fences: the last are the most dangerous
obstacles, if you get off the track, or if the gate through the fence has
been placed for convenience a few yards on one side of it; the horses
cannot see the slender wires in the dark, and so fall over them, injuring
themselves and their riders most seriously sometimes. Having still about
eight miles to go, we were galloping gaily over a wide open plain, our
only anxiety arising from the fast failing daylight; but the horses were
still quite fresh, and, as the French idiom would have it, devoured the
ground at a fine pace; when, in an instant, the ground appeared to rise up
to meet me, and I found myself dragged along on the extreme point of my
right shoulder, still grasping both reins and whip. I was almost under the
feet of the other horse, and I saw Helen's heels describing frantic
circles in the air. F—— shouted to me to let go, which it had
never occurred to me to do previously. I did so, and jumped up instantly,
feeling quite unhurt, and rather relieved to find that a fall was not so
dreadful after all. I then saw the cause of the accident: the handle of a
little travelling-bag which had been hung over the pommel of my saddle had
slipped over the slight projection, and as it was still further secured by
a strap through the girth, it was dangling under poor Helen, whose frantic
bounds and leaps only increased the liveliness of her tormentor. I never
saw such bucks and jumps high into the air as she performed receiving a
severe blow from the bag at each; it was impossible to help laughing,
though I did not see how it was all to end. She would not allow F——
to approach her, and was perfectly mad with terror. At last the girths
gave way, and the saddle came off, with the bag still fastened to it; the
moment she found herself free, she trotted up to me in the most engaging
manner, and stood rubbing her nose against my arm, though she was still
trembling all over, and covered with foam.</p>
<p>By this time I had made the discovery that I could not raise my right arm;
but still a careful investigation did not tell me it was broken, for it
gave me no pain to touch anywhere, except a very little just on the point
of the shoulder. F—— now went to pick up the saddle and the
reins; it was difficult to find these latter in the fast gathering
darkness and I held his horse for him. To my horror I found after standing
for a moment or two, that I was going to faint; I could not utter a word;
I knew that if my fast-relaxing fingers let go their hold of the bridle
the horse would set off towards home at a gallop, Helen would assuredly
follow him, and we should be left eight miles from the nearest shelter to
find our way to it, with a deep creek to cross. F—— was fifty
yards off, with his back to me, searching for some indispensable buckle;
so there was no help to be got from him at the moment. I exerted every
atom of my remaining strength to slip the bridle over my left arm, which I
pressed against my waist; then I sat down as quietly as I could, not to
alarm the horse, bent forward so as to keep my left arm under me lest the
bridle should slip off, and fainted away in great peace and comfort. The
cold was becoming so intense that it soon revived me, and F——,
suspecting something was wrong, came to relieve me of the care of the
horse, and contrived to get the girths repaired with the ever-ready flax,
and the bag secured in a very short time. But when it came to mounting
again, that was not so easy: every time I tried to spring, something
jarred horribly in the socket where the arm fits into the shoulder, and
the pain was so great that I had to lie down on the ground. It was now
nearly seven o'clock, quite dark, and freezing hard; we were most anxious
to get on, and yet what was to be done? I could not mount, apparently, and
there was no stone or bank to stand on and get up by for an immense way.
At last F—— put me up by sheer strength. I found myself so
deadly sick and faint when I was fairly in the saddle that it was some
time before I could allow Helen to move; and never shall I forget the
torture of her first step, for my shoulder was now stiffening in a most
unpleasant way. F—— said it would be easier to canter; so we
set off at full speed, and the cold air against my face kept me from
fainting as we went along, though I fully expected to fall off every
moment; if Helen had shied, or stumbled, or even capered a little, I
should have been on the ground again. In my torture and despair, I
proposed to be left behind, and for F—— to ride on and get
help; but he would not hear of this, declaring that I should die of cold
before he could get back with a cart, and that it was very doubtful if he
should find me again on the vast plain, with nothing to guide him, and in
the midnight darkness. Whenever we came to a little creek which we were
obliged to jump, Helen's safe arrival on the opposite bank was announced
by a loud yell from me, caused by agony hardly to be described. The cold
appeared to get <i>into</i> the broken joint, and make it so much worse.</p>
<p>At last we reached Rockwood, and never was its friendly shelter more
welcome. Everything that could be thought of was done to alleviate my
sufferings; but I resembled Punch with his head on one side, for I had a
well-defined and gigantic hump on my back, and my shoulder was swollen up
to my ear. The habit-body was unpicked, as it was impossible to get it off
any other way. Of course, the night was one of great agony; but I thought
often, as I paced the room, how much better it was to have a blazing fire
to cheer me up, and some delicious tea to put my lips to "when so
dispoged" (like the immortal Mrs. Gamp), than to be lying on the open
plain in a hard frost, wondering when F—— and his cart would
arrive.</p>
<p>The next day we returned home, much against our host's wish; and I walked
all the way, some six miles of mountain road, for I could not bear the
idea of riding. F—— led the horses, and we arrived quite
safely. His first idea was to take me down to a doctor, but the motion of
driving was greater agony than riding, as the road was rough; so after the
first mile, I entreated to be taken back, and we turned the horses' heads
towards home again; and when we reached it, I got out all my little books
on surgery, medicine, etc., and from them made out how to set my shoulder
in some sort of fashion, with F——'s help. Of course it is
still useless to me, but I think it is mending itself; and after a week I
could do everything with my left hand, even to writing, after a fashion.
The only thing I could <i>not</i> do was to arrange my hair, or even to
brush it; and though F—— was "willing," he was so exceedingly
awkward, that at last, after going through great anguish and having it
pulled out by handfuls, I got him to cut it off, and it is now cropped
like a small boy's. He cuts up my dinner, etc. for me; but it is a very
trying process, and I don't wonder at children often leaving the nasty
cold mess half eaten. I shall be very glad to be able to use my own knife
again.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Letter XXV: How We lost our horses and had to walk home. </h2>
<p>Broomielaw, November 1868. This will actually be my last letter from the
Malvern Hills; and, in spite of the joy I feel at the hope of seeing all
my beloved ones in England, I am <i>so</i> sorry to leave my dear little
happy valley. We have done nothing but pay farewell visits lately; and I
turn for a final look at each station or cottage as we ride away with a
great tightness at my heart, and moisture in my eyes, to think I shall
never see them again. You must not be jealous at the lingering regrets I
feel, for unless you had been with me here you can never understand how
kind and friendly all our neighbours, high and low, have been to us from
the very first, or how dearly I have grown to love them. I don't at all
know how I am to say good-bye to my dear Mrs. M——, the
shepherd's wife I told you of. I believe she will miss me more than any
one; and I cannot bear to think of her left to pass her days without the
help of books and papers, which I was always so glad to lend her. I often
walk down the valley to take tea with her of an afternoon and to say
good-bye, but I have not said it yet. I wish you could see her parlour as
I saw it yesterday afternoon—her books in a bookcase of her
husband's manufacture, very nice and pretty; her spinning-wheel in the
comer; the large "beau-pot" of flowers in the window; and such a tea on
the table!—cream like clots of gold, scones, oat-cakes, all sorts of
delicacies! She herself is quite charming—one of Nature's ladies. I
have given her, as a parting gift, a couple of Scotch views framed; and
they hang on the wall as a memento of places equally dear to both of us.</p>
<p>It is a sorrow to me to leave the horses and dogs and my pet calves and
poultry; even the trees and creepers I go round to look at, with the
melancholy feeling of other owners not loving them so much as I have done.
However, I must not make my last letter too dismal, or you will feel that
I am not glad enough to return to you all. My only apology is, I have been
so <i>very</i> happy here.</p>
<p>Now for our latest adventure, as absurd as any, in its way. Have I ever
told you that our post-office is ten miles off, with an atrocious road
between us and it? I know you will throw down this letter and feel rather
disgusted with me for being sorry to leave such a place, but we don't mind
trifles here. Lately, since our own establishment has been broken up, we
have been living in great discomfort; and among other things we generally,
if not always, have to go for our own letters twice a week. Upon this
occasion F—— and I had ridden together up the gorge of the
Selwyn rather late in the afternoon, to avoid the extreme heat of the day.
When we reached the shepherd's hut I have before mentioned, and which is
now deserted, I proposed to F—— to go on over the hills alone
and leave me there, as I was very hot and tired, and he could travel much
quicker without me—for I am ashamed to say that I still object to
riding fast up and down slippery hills. I cannot get rid of the idea that
I shall break my neck if I attempt it, whereas F—— goes on
over the worst road just as if it was perfectly level. Excuse this
digression, for it is a relief to me to be a little spiteful about his
pace whenever I have an opportunity, and it will probably be my last
chance of expressing my entire disapproval of it.</p>
<p>Helen was tied up to a post, and F——, after helping me to
dismount, set off at a canter over the adjoining swamp on his way to cross
the chain of hills between the river and the flat where the great
coach-road to the West Coast runs. I had brought the ingredients for my
five o'clock tea (without which I am always a lost and miserable
creature), and I amused myself, during my solitude, by picking up dry bits
of scrub for my fire; but I had to go down the river-bank for some
driftwood to make the old kettle, belonging to the hut, boil. I could not
help wondering how any human being could endure such solitude for years,
as the occupant of a hut like this is necessarily condemned to. In itself
it was as snug and comfortable as possible, with a little paddock for the
shepherd's horse, an acre or so of garden, now overgrown with self-sown
potatoes, peas, strawberry, raspberry, and gooseberry plants, the little
thatched fowl-house near, and the dog-kennels; all giving it a thoroughly
home-like look. The hoarse roar of the river over its rocky bed was the
only sound; now and then a flock of wild ducks would come flying down to
their roosting-place or nests among the Tohi grass; and as the evening
closed in the melancholy cry of the bittern and the weka's loud call broke
the stillness, but only to make it appear more profound. On each side of
the ravine in which the hut stands rise lofty hills so steeply from the
water's edge that in places we can find no footing for our horses, and
have to ride in the river. At this time of the year the sheep are all upon
the hills; so you do not hear even a bleat: but in winter, they come down
to the sunny, sheltered flats.</p>
<p>It appeared to me as if I was alone there for hours, though it really was
less than one hour, when F—— returned with a large bundle of
letters and papers tied to his saddle-bow. Tea was quite ready now; so he
tied up his horse next Helen, and we had tea and looked at our letters.
One of the first I opened told me that some friends from Christchurch,
whom I expected to pay us a visit soon, were on their way up that very
day, and in fact might be expected to arrive just about that hour. I was
filled with blank dismay, for not only did the party consist of three
grown-up people—nay, four—but three little children. I had
made elaborate plans in my head as to how and where they should all be
stowed away for a fortnight, but had naturally deferred till the last
moment to carry out my arrangements, for they entailed giving up our own
bedroom, and "camping" in the dining-room, besides wonderful substitutes
of big packing-cases for cribs, etc. etc. But, alas! here we were eight
miles from home and nothing done, not even any extra food ordered or
prepared. The obvious thing was to mount our horses and return as fast as
ever we could, and we hastened out of the hut to the spot where we had
left them both securely tied to the only available post, through which
unfortunately five wires ran, as it was one of the "standards" of a fence
which extended for miles. Just as we came out of the hut in a great
bustle, our evil destiny induced F——'s horse to rub its nose
against the top wire of the fence; and in this process it caught the bar
of its snaffle-bit, and immediately pulled back: this made all the wires
jingle. Helen instantly took alarm, and pulled back too: fresh and
increased vibration, extending up the hill-side and echoing back an
appalling sound, was the result of this movement. In an instant there were
both the horses pulling with all their force against the fence, terrified
to death; and no wonder, for the more they pulled the more the wires
jingled. F—— did all he could to soothe them with
blandishments. I tried to coax Helen, but the nearer we drew the more
frantically they backed and plunged, and the more the noise increased—till
it was a case of "one struggle more and I am free;" and leaving their
bridles still fastened to the fatal fence by the reins, we had the
satisfaction of seeing both our horses careering wildly about—first
celebrating their escape from danger by joyous and frantic bounds and
kicks, and then setting off down the gorge of the river as hard as they
could go. I fairly sat down and whimpered a little, not only at the
thought of our eight miles' walk over shingle with a deep river to be
crossed nine times, but at the idea of my poor little guests arriving to
find no supper, no beds, "no nothing."</p>
<p>F—— tried to cheer me up, and said the only thing was to get
home as quick as possible; but he did not expect to find that our friends
had arrived, for it had been very hazy over the plains all day, and
probably had rained hard in Christchurch; so he thought they would not
have started on their journey at all. But I refused to accept any comfort
from this idea, and bemoaned myself, entirely on their account,
incessantly. When we came to the first crossing, F—— picked me
up and carried me over dry-shod, and this he did at all the fords; but in
one we very nearly came to grief, for I was tilted like a sack over his
shoulder, and when we were quite in the middle, and the water was very
deep, up to his waist, he kept hoisting my feet higher and higher, quite
forgetting that there was plenty more of me on the other side of his
shoulder; so it ended in my arms getting very wet, which he did not seem
to think mattered at all so long as my feet were dry; whereas I rather
preferred having my feet than my head plunged into a surging, deafening
yellow current. At the entrance of the gorge is a large stockyard, and
near to it, at least a mile or two off, a large mob of horses is generally
to be found feeding. We heard great neighing and galloping about amongst
them as we came out of the gorge; it was much too dark to distinguish
anything, but we guessed that our horses had joined these, and the sounds
we heard were probably those of welcome. But the whole mob set off the
moment we came near, and crossed the river again, entailing a tenth
wetting upon poor F——. I was posted at the entrance of the
gorge, with instructions to shout and otherwise keep them from going up by
the route we had just come; but it was more than an hour before F——could
get round the wary brutes, so as to turn them with their heads towards the
stockyard. Of course, he had to bring up the whole mob. My talents in the
shouting line were not called out upon this occasion, for they all trotted
into the stockyard of their own accord, and I had nothing to do but put up
the slip-rail as fast as I could with only one available arm, for though
it is better, I cannot use the other yet. When F—— came up we
both went into the yard, and could soon make out the two horses which had
their saddles on—that was the only way we could distinguish them in
the dark. It was now nearly eleven o'clock, and though warm enough it was
very cloudy, not a star to be seen. We fastened on the patched up bridles
as well as we could by feeling, and mounted, and rode home, about three
miles more, as fast as we could. When we entered the flat near our own
house, we heard loud and prolonged "coo-ees" from all sides. The servants
had made up their minds that some terrible misfortune had happened to us,
and were setting out to look for us, "coo-eeing" as they came along. F——
pointed out to me, with a sort of "I-told-you-so" air, that there was no
light in the drawing-room—so it was evident our friends had not
arrived; and when we dismounted I found, to my great joy, that the house
was empty. All our fatigue was forgotten in thankfulness that the poor
travellers had not been exposed to such a cold, comfortless reception as
would have awaited them if they had made their journey that day. I must
tell you, they arrived quite safely the next evening, but very tired,
especially the poor children; however, everything was ready, and the
little boys were particularly pleased with their box beds, greatly
preferring the difficulties of getting in and out of them to their own
pretty little cribs at home. Such are boys all over the world!</p>
<p>Next month we leave this for ever, and go down to Christchurch to make our
final arrangements for the long voyage of a hundred days before us. As the
time draws near I realize how strong is the tie which has grown, even in
these few short years, around my heart, connecting it with this lovely
land, and the kind friends I have found in it. F—— feels the
parting more deeply than I do, if possible, though for different reasons;
he has lived so long among these beautiful hills, and is so accustomed to
have before his eyes their grand outlines. He was telling me this the
other day, and has put the same feelings into the following verses, which
I now send you.</p>
<p>A farewell.<br/>
The seamen shout once and together,<br/>
The anchor breaks up from the ground,<br/>
And the ship's head swings to the weather,<br/>
To the wind and the sea swings round;<br/>
With a clamour the great sail steadies,<br/>
In extreme of a storm scarce furled;<br/>
Already a short wake eddies,<br/>
And a furrow is cleft and curled<br/>
To the right and left.<br/>
<br/>
Float out from the harbour and highland<br/>
That hides all the region I know,<br/>
Let me look a last time on the island<br/>
Well seen from the sea to the snow.<br/>
The lines of the ranges I follow,<br/>
I travel the hills with my eyes,<br/>
For I know where they make a deep hollow,<br/>
A valley of grass and the rise<br/>
Of streams clearer than glass.<br/>
<br/>
That haunt is too far for me wingless,<br/>
And the hills of it sink out of sight,<br/>
Yet my thought were but broken and stringless,<br/>
And the daylight of song were but night.<br/>
If I could not at will a winged dream let<br/>
Lift me and take me and set<br/>
Me again by the trees and the streamlet;<br/>
These leagues make a wide water, yet<br/>
The whole world shall not hide.<br/>
<br/>
Now my days leave the soft silent byway,<br/>
And clothed in a various sort,<br/>
In iron or gold, on life's highway<br/>
New feet shall succeed, or stop short<br/>
Shod hard these maybe, or made splendid,<br/>
Fair and many, or evil and few,<br/>
But the going of bare feet has ended,<br/>
Of naked feet set in the new<br/>
Meadow grass sweet and wet.<br/>
<br/>
I will long for the ways of soft walking,<br/>
Grown tired of the dust and the glare,<br/>
And mute in the midst of much talking<br/>
Will pine for the silences rare;<br/>
Streets of peril and speech full of malice<br/>
Will recall me the pastures and peace<br/>
Which gardened and guarded those valleys<br/>
With grasses as high as the knees,<br/>
Calm as high as the sky:<br/>
<br/>
While the island secure in my spirit<br/>
At ease on its own ocean rides,<br/>
And Memory, a ship sailing near it,<br/>
Shall float in with favouring tides,<br/>
Shall enter the harbours and land me<br/>
To visit the gorges and heights<br/>
Whose aspects seemed once to command me,<br/>
As queens by their charms command knights<br/>
To achievements of arms.<br/>
<br/>
And as knights have caught sight of queens' faces<br/>
Through the dust of the lists and the din,<br/>
So, remembering these holiest places<br/>
In the days when I lose or I win,<br/>
I will yearn to them, all being over,<br/>
Triumphant or trampled beneath,<br/>
To this beautiful isle like a lover,<br/>
To her evergreen brakes for a wreath,<br/>
For a tear to her lakes.<br/>
<br/>
The last of her now is a brightening<br/>
Far fire in the forested hills,<br/>
The breeze as the night nears is heightening,<br/>
The cordage draws tighter and thrills,<br/>
Like a horse that is spurred by the rider<br/>
The great vessel quivers and quails,<br/>
And passes the billows beside her,<br/>
The fair wind is strong in her sails,<br/>
She is lifted along.<br/>
<br/>
THE END.<br/></p>
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