A homely hotel—Hotel management in New Zealand
and New South Wales—Sharp criticism—Wanganui, the
town—Its fine reserve—Mount Ruapehu—A pioneer
settler—Diligent farmers—Great fertility of soil—Signs of
prosperity—A coasting steamer—The Rip—Entrance to
Wellington Harbour—Panoramic view of the capital —Then and
now—Importance of the city—View from Mount Victoria.
Wanganui, like
all the New Zealand towns we have yet seen, strikes a
stranger favourably at first glance. Oh, if our Australian
hotel-keepers and licensed victuallers were but more alive
to the importance of first impressions! The welcome we
received at the "Rutland" did more to dissipate our
fatigue than even the subsequent ablutions and snug little
supper. It was past ten, and we had had nothing since
midday, and were, as you may imagine, both tired and
hungry. On timidly preferring a request for supper, what a
relief to find alacrity, in place of the usual response to
which a long travelling experience in New South
Wales had habituated us—that response being, generally,
something of this sort—"The kitchen's closed, and the
cook's gone; ye can't havenuthin." Instead of that we were served with
delicious oysters, fresh bread, and beautiful butter, and
told that if we wanted a hot grill or cup of tea or
anything, it would be a pleasure to get it for us.
The hotel was full, but the kind landlady, Mrs. Parsons,
vacated her own room for us, and made us as comfortable as
if we had been at home. Nor is this by any means an
unusual experience in New Zealand—at Oram's, in Auckland;
at McRae's, in Wairoa ; at the Criterion, in Napier; here
at the Rutland, in Wanganui; and, most notably of all, at
Moeller's Occidental Hotel, in Wellington ; at Warner's,
in Christchurch ; and the Grand, at Dunedin, we found a
civility and attention, a readiness to oblige, and a
disposition to forestall one's most trivial wants, which,
alas!— and I say it deliberately—are sadly absent in
hotels on the Sydney side, with only a few
honourable exceptions.
The domestics
certainly seem more willing, and whether it be the
climate, or better system, or what, I know not, but
they"are decidedly less lazy than the usual Phyllises and
Ganymedes, to whose tender mercies travellers owe so
mighty little of comfort or pleasure, in New South
Wales.
While on this
subject, it is a real pleasure to testify to the good
hotel management we have experienced so far in New
Zealand. Take, for instance, the bedrooms. It is the rule,
not the exception, in bush "pubs" and country inns on the
Sydney side, to find a filthy deposit of dirt,
organic matter, and other abominations in your ewer and
water-jug. The ewer is seldom thoroughly washed out, or scalded with hot
water, and the basins merely get a perfunctory rub
with a greasy cloth after the slops have been
emptied. The towels are often in rags, and the soap is
seemingly as hard to find as the Holy Grail. Of the
condition of the bath-room— when there does happen to be
one, which is not often—common modesty and decency forbids
me to speak. The defiant disregard of the first
principles of sanitary laws in the disposition of closets
and other conveniences, shocks the stranger and disgusts
every traveller.
"What matter?"
muses the publican. "It's the bar that pays. Travellers
are only a nuisance. Them there arrangements wor good
enuff for me, ever sence I wor a kid. Oh, hang travellers!—let
'em leave it or lump it. Gim me the good thirsty 'uns!"
Such is the
normal state of affairs in many inns in New South Wales.
As for the cookery!— that, alas, is simply nasty ; there's
no other word for it. The kitchens are polluted and vile.
The surroundings are odious. The atmosphere of the
bar and common rooms reeks with the odour of stale
beer and sickly tobacco fumes. Bacchus in New South Wales
is no longer the rosy radiant god, but a combination
satyr—part swine, part slobbering Silenus—and wholly
repugnant to every clean instinct. Of course, I am not
forgetful of some bright exceptions to this description.
Here in New
Zealand, however, I have not yet seen a dirty bedroom. The
various utensils for ablutions are gratefully clean.
Naturally, with abundant water the baths are copiously
supplied; but then the accessories and surroundings are so
clean and comfortable! The butcher's meat is
naturally superior; but how much is that superiority enhanced by the
prevalent cleanliness and the really good cookery ? It is
an ungrateful task at all times to find fault, and doubly
distasteful when a comparison tells against one's local
prejudices and the natural bias one has in favour of home
institutions. Still, if I am to be a truthful critic, I must
give my opinions on what I observe, honestly and
fearlessly ; and I am content to appeal to any traveller
who has had experience of hotels in New Zealand and New
South Wales to say whether, at every point, the management
of theolder colony does not lag miserably behind that of
the newer colony.
"Bung" is a
mighty power in the land; and the licensed victualler's
calling is an honourable and a necessary one. But in the
name of common sense and common fairness, let the bargain
be observed loyally on both sides. In many cases, as
things go at present, the licence is all with the publican
to do as he "darn pleases," while the victualling, which
the public have a right to expect is Yes, just so, a blank!
But to return to
Wanganui. If the visitor wants to have a comprehensive
view of the town, let him do as we did, and mount the
steep Flagstaff Hill, which looks down upon the river,
spanned by its noble bridge on iron piers; and there,
while his sense of smell is regaled with the sweet scent
of the blossoming- whins, his ears are ravished with the
dulcet chorus of the warbling larks and linnets; let
him feast his eyes on the magnificent panorama
which unfolds itself before his gaze.
Away from the
symmetrical town, nestling round its two sandy knolls, and
skirted by the silvery river at your feet, your eyes are
drawn as by some irresistible fascination to yonder mighty
altar, up- rearing its spotless architecture right away up
from the puny brethren around it, till it stands out
clear, distinct, sharp cut, in virgin purity, looking like
"a great white throne" let down from Heaven.
It is Mount
Ruapehu, crowned with eternal snows, draped with samite,
and glistening in the sun ; and yet so calm, peaceful,
pure, that as you gaze, the spell works, and you stand
hushed, subdued, and yet with the sense of a great peace within
you, as you think of the pure majesty of the
Creator of that wondrous pinnacle of light and glory, and
can feel that even the tiny lark poised above your head,
throbbing with song, has its every feather noted by His
all-seeing eye, and that in the boundless infinitude of
His love, you too, have the portion of a child.
The larks! Yes,
here they are abounding, exultant. What an incense of song
! What delightful trills and melodies ! What gushes of
minstrelsy all around ! Daisies, too, peeping up at us
with their pink-tipped fringes. And the gorse ! Surely we
are back in the old country.
A glance below
at the wooden town dispels the illusion.
I have mentioned two sandhills in the middle of the town.
One is crowned with an old block-house, used now as a gaol; but which served
as a rallying centre, and was intended as a refuge during the troublous
times of the Maori war. The other is bare, save for a ruddy brown carpet of
sorrel, which looks for all the world like heather in the distance. Both
spaces are reserves for the use of the inhabitants.
And in this
matter of reserves, how rich is the dower of Wanganui.
There is a fine wide expanse of racecourse, with paddocks,
grand stand, and offices, all very complete. But round the
town, embracing it in a wide semi-circle from the river to
the river again, is a splendid reserve called the
Town Belt. It comprises 600 acres of fine rich land,
partly put down in plantations, partly let out on short
leases, thus yielding a revenue to the corporation, and forming indeed a
noble heritage for the generations that are to come.
The town has a
good water supply from springs and lakes on the rampart of
tableland that overlooks the flat on the side farthest
from the river. One lake is three miles out, and has only
lately been united to the supply. There is a fall
of over 200 feet, giving a splendid head of water for
service in cases of fires.
Sales of stock
are held weekly, at which there is a large gathering of
farmers and settlers. Hotels, churches, banks, insurance
offices, and shops that would not disgrace George or Pitt
Streets, Sydney, all impress .the observer with a belief in the
soundness and future importance of Wanganui. The entrance
to the river is four miles down, and there is a bar which
at present detracts somewhat from the serviceability of
the harbour. A long breakwater is now, however, being
formed, and will, when finished, extend 2800 feet into
deep water. The bar will then be cleared, and it is
believed the scour of the river will always maintain an open and
deep passage.
We were lucky
enough to get a grand drive out into the surrounding
country, under the genial guidance of our friend and
fellow-countryman, Mr. Peat. He is a genuine specimen of
the sturdy, independent Scot, who has carved his own way
to a competency, but has not with the increase of
wealth gathered any of its hardening incrustations.
There is no film over his soul. He will tell you of the
early times when he was glad to take the first job that
offered. He points out the field in which he did his first
day's work at the tail end of a New Zealand plough. And
then with simple manly modesty, he tells the story of his
struggle with fortune, ending in his being in possession
of these rich paddocks—these waving plantations—
these comfortable farms—these rolling downs and
pastures, through which we ride for miles, and at last
alight at the door of his handsome and comfortable family mansion on a
height overlooking the town.
The country
round Wanganui is wonderfully fertile. We drove over one
field of stubble, and the farmer, in whose occupancy was
the land, had threshed out ninety-seven bushels of oats to the acre.
The thick second growth of self-sown crop showed
that the yield must have been considerably over a
hundredfold.
All along this
coast, right up to Taranaki, there exists a curious chain
of lakes, running parallel with the sea, at a distance of
a few miles inland. To the seaward side of these lakes,
the country is sandy, light, and not particularly fertile.
But between the lakes and the hill ranges, the soil is
magnificent. A rich black loam that can grow
anything. Only a very narrow strip of country, comparatively speaking, is
as yet settled here. All the back-wooded country, the
hilly valleys and ranges, are still unoccupied. Room here
for thousands of colonists. The roads are in good order.
They are under the supervision of county boards, who levy
a rate of three farthings per pound on the acreage value.
They take the Government valuation for the property tax,
as the basis of their assessment. The limit under the
property tax is one penny per pound.
Farming here is
in a healthy state. It was a genuine pleasure to me to see
the trim hedges, the cleared-out ditches, the long clean
expanse of well- tilled fields, unmarred by a single
unsightly stump or fallen log. In one field we saw the
farmer and his men cleaning out an empty dam, and
spreading the silt as a top dressing on a bit of poor land.
Grazing is, however, the chief industry, and most
of the splendidly-grassed paddocks were not so many years
ago waving high with the ubiquitous bracken and manuka
scrub. Twenty years ago there was scarcely a hoof in the
district, and now my host sells often in one transaction
over six hundred head of the finest fat beasts a dealer
could pick up anywhere.
Everybody tells
me "things are awfully depressed in New Zealand." Certainly I could see
no signs of this depression in Wanganui. The signs
were absent from Auckland. They were not visible in
Napier, and in almost every village on our route we saw
only evidences of industry, activity, and progress. Even
in Wellington, the much-bewailed depression eluded us
still. If this be "the awfully depressed state of
things" so constantly bemoaned, then New Zealand,
when things are brisk and lively, must have been about the
friskiest community and the liveliest country to live in,
that all history makes any mention of.
We took passage
to Wellington in a little coasting steamer, yclept the
Stormbird. The steward was really very hospitable and
kind, and made a state-room for myself and wife out of the
little smoking-room. We were so close to the
machinery, that on the experience of that one night, I
might surely set up as an authority on clangour and
clanking for life.
We sailed in the
cheerful company of a dangerous lunatic under charge of a constable. There
were also a goodly company of passengers. The case
of the lunatic aptly illustrates a phase of journalistic
practice which is, alas! too common in these colonies. How
often the legitimate influence of the Press is frittered
away, in petty local squabbles, in pandering to narrow prejudices, in
fomenting little quarrels, and fostering a strait-
laced Pharisaism, all the while neglecting to teach the
broader, nobler lessons of the big, broad, throbbing world
outside the isolated narrow- minded circle in which the
local rag is too often, alas! the weekly apple of discord,
instead of being the fruit of the tree of life. The
lunatic was declared to be a sane man by the authorities
at Wellington. Doctors do differ, always have
differed, and probably always will differ. It being
dull season with the papers, the case of the lunatic
formed the subject of a leading article. The medicos who
committed the man at Wanganui took up the cudgels in their
own behalf. And now a very pretty duel is raging between
the' two sets of medicos, while the Press acts as
judicious bottle-holder, and pokes up both sides with its
traditional impartiality.
Coming through
the Straits, we encounter "The Rip," a current running
like a mill race, and a very fast and powerful mill race
at that. The little "puffer" of a steamer sturdily sets
its stout stem against the mad turmoil, and bravely
ploughs it way through.
The coast is, as usual, bare and uninviting. The same
serrated backbone of hills, with sharp- edged spurs, abrupt ravines, conical
mounds, and here and there a bare gable end, where some landslip has
collapsed into the sea, exposing the interior economy of the mountain,
which a constant shower of loose stones and gravel tries in vain to hide.
The entrance to
Wellington Harbour is very bold and striking. The sun is
just rising, and a soft haze rests on the ocean. Great
toothlike rocky ridges stud the heaving sea, covered with
waterfowl, and the long swell dashes with a surly
roar amid their ragged recesses, and the gleaming foam
contrast finely with their blackness.
Another similar
ridge on Barrett's Reef looks like the fossil jaw of some
antediluvian monster. Another scattered line of just such
black ugly rocks divides the channel, and in the absence
of lights, with a battery on either side, and a torpedo
service, I fancy it might be made a very hazardous
matter indeed for any hostile .ship to force an entrance.
As we steam up
the broad sound, between the hilly peninsula on the left,
and the bold mountain chain on the right, we are
confronted with an island lying right in the centre of the
land-locked bay. It is at present used as a quarantine
station ; but would surely form a fine site for an inner
fortress.
Away up in the
right-hand corner, beyond the island, lies the Hutt, with
its gardens, railway workshops, and scattered residences,
and the river debouching over its shingly flat between the
hills. Right behind the island, with two or three
miles of gleaming bay intervening, is the little village
of Petone, nestling under its fern-clad cliffs.
We turn sharp
round a projecting cape to the left, and Wellington, the
empire city, lies before us. In the lee of the cape we
have evidence of the prevailing war scare. On the point a
gang of men are busily toiling at the earthworks
for the heavy gun battery. Below on the beach a
cluster of snowy military tents betokens the presence of
other large bodies of men engaged in forming approaches,
and in other camp duties.
But can that
stately city be Wellington? What a change from the shabby,
lowly, insignificant village of twenty years ago.
When I last saw
Wellington it looked from the harbour but a collocation of
shambling huts, sprawled down higgledy-piggledy along the
scant margin of pebbly beach, between the hills behind
and the harbour in front. Barring the provincial
buildings and Parliament House there was scarcely an
edifice of any pretensions to be seen. We were rowed
ashore to a landing-stage, rickety and green with slime,
among blackened piles, on which was built the Empire
Hotel, then the fashionable resort of visitors. The town
consisted of one long straggling business street, known as
Lambton Quay, with a few weatherboard dwellings perched
here and there on the terraced hills behind.
Now! The wizard
wand of progress has waved to some good purpose during the
twenty years that have elapsed. Under the auspices of the
Harbour Board, a spacious strand has been reclaimed from the shallows of
the bay. The massive wharves stretch out their welcoming arms into
deep water; and ocean giants like the Coptic yield
themselves to the friendly embrace, and pour forth their
argosies of freight on the ample structures.
A stately post
and telegraph office, with a fine clock tower, boasting of
mellow chimes such as I have heard nowhere else in
Australasia, confronts the visitor; and around it rise
pile on pile of ornamental buildings, block after block of commodious
warehouses, showy facades of offices, rows of shops,
and all the usual bank buildings, customs offices,
and general surroundings of a busy, thriving seaport. And all these occupy
the site of what was deep water twenty years ago. The
Supreme Court buildings, the Government, insurance, and
other offices, the enormous wooden structure surrounded by its
gardens (said to be the largest wooden building in the
world, under whose roof the various Government departments
find shelter) are all built on reclaimed ground. There was
not a vestige of all this when I last saw the infant
city.
Square massive
blocks crown the heights. Here the hospital; there the
Catholic college. All along the sweeping semi-circle of
guarding hills, the continuity of villas, terraces, and
gardens is broken by the spires of handsome churches, or
the ridge line of important institutions. The site for
the great central prison, with its tall chimney, and
ever-varying groups of labouring convicts, burrowing at the face of
the cliffy banks, levelling the mounds, and filling up the
hollows like so many Gargantuan ants. The elegant spire of
St. Peter's English church; the high scaffolding of
St. John's Scotch church, rising like the Phoenix
from its ashes of two years ago; the Catholic church of
St. Joseph's; the Catholic cathedral of St. Mary's; the
dainty spire and turrets of St. Andrew's Scotch church,
boasting the prettiest interior of any church in the
colonies. All these, and others, look down on the busy
town below, and point one's thoughts upward to
the purer realms, where the tricks of trade and the
sordid pursuits of earth find no abiding place.
Wellington owes
much to its Harbour Board. Geographically speaking, it
occupies a most important position, and must always be a shipping
centre, as it commands trade routes to every coast
of both North and South islands. The railways, too, are
being pushed vigorously forward, and all the wealth of the
Wairarapa Valley, and the rich lands to the north along
the Manawatu railway now in course of construction, must
inevitably find their entrepot in Wellington.
From the harbour
one gets but a cramped idea of the extent of the town. One
sees nothing of the dense array of houses which fill the
Te Aro Valley, which stretch in long streets away for some
miles towards Island Bay, and which huddle together in
the narrow valleys up behind the first terrace on
the backward hills.
The best idea of
the extent of the city can be gained by ascending Mount
Victoria or Flagstaff Hill. It is a pretty steep pull, but
the view from the summit amply repays you for your
exertions.
How the city
seems to open out the higher we ascend among the gorse and
rocky spurs. Every valley is now seen to be full of
houses. The harbour opens out into numerous long bays. The
calm ocean (for, wonderful phenomenon for Wellington, the winds are lulled
and the day is placid) lies spread out before us in all
its bewitching beauty, flecked only here and there with a
few small craft, lying idly rocking on the glassy
surface. The long grey sweep of the rocky peninsula
terminates in a busy swarming scene, where the gangs of
men are lustily working at the fortifications. Beyond rises the abrupt
ridgy backbone of hills which bounds the harbour to the
southward, and following their craggy sweep from the
lighthouse, the eye reaches the smoking valley of the
Hutt, where the reek from the railway workshops rises in a
murky cloud into the clear sky. The island nestles in the
foreground like a fragment of the surrounding hills
dropped into mid-harbour. Behind, we see the scarped
cuttings in the cliffs; and the busy steaming trains
running to and fro, disclose the meaning of these rigid,
uncompromising lines, which at first puzzle one, and look
like the trenches of an investing army.
Then comes the
long semi-circular array of serried streets, noble
buildings, imposing blocks, and the busy motion of the
quays in front. It is, indeed, a grand panorama, and well repays the climb.
There is a
chorus of melodious larks making the air alive with song;
and beneath our feet little daisies in rich profusion
smile at us from the close-cropped turf. Great splashes of
gold reflect back the sun rays with almost a blinding
radiance from the hillsides around, where the gorse is
bourgeoning forth its yellow glory; and the air!—
so clear, so crisp, so exhilarating! No wonder the
children have such ruddy cheeks, and the maidens such
bright eyes and bonnie faces, in Wellington, the Empire
city, as its citizens love to call it. |