Dunkeld—Our Jehu—On the box seat—A Chinese
Boniface —Gabriel's Gully—Good farming—Dunedin—Harbour
works—A category of ''the biggest things on record''
—Charms of Dunedin—A holiday drive—The Grand
Hotel—The churches—Preachers—Dunedin mud— Beer—Keen
business competition—The West Coast connection—"Wild Cat" claims—The Scotch
element— Litigiousness—Energy of the people.
Roxburgh, like
nearly all the other goldfields towns in New Zealand, is
now but a shadow of its former self. There is not much of
interest to note about it.
To Dunkeld, we
ride through a wide pastoral valley studded with numerous
farms, and pass the deserted sites of old gold-crushings
by the river. One or two dredges are still at work in the
stream ; but the gold got now is insignificant in
comparison with the returns of the pristine rushes, when
the valley was a busy humming human hive. Old
James M'Intosh, our Jehu, one of the oldest drivers
in New Zealand, is full of reminiscences of these stirring
times. He points out to us the fine freehold estate of Mr.
Joseph Clarke, brother of Sir William Clarke, of Victoria.
Many farms about here are let at a high rental. I was told
they did not pay. We pass frequent parties of rabbitters,
and almost every man we meet carries a gun, and is
followed by several dogs. The rabbit question is a burning
one hereabouts. We are getting out of the country of rocks
now, and the hills become more rounded, and are clad with
a denser growth. The scenery is more distinctly
pastoral and rural. Flax swamps increase, and we leave the
snows and cataracts behind us.
Dunkeld is a
sleepy-looking little hamlet. Its great four-square hotel
is big enough for a popula- of ten times the number the
town can muster. The curtainless windows look cheerless.
The coach is packed inside, and I share the box
seat with a dandy, diminutive publican, who has made a snug little pile as a
butcher, and has taken to the tap in his old age as a sort of genteel
occupation for his declining years. The little man is possessed of a fine
vein of humour, of the broad American kind, and some of his passing
remarks on men and
things are shrewd and witty withal. The other occupant of the box seat is a
desperately drunken Irishman, who alternately wants to fight and embrace the
ex-butcher. At the slightest remark he flares up in the most ferocious
manner, evidently looking on me as a base and bloody Saxon, whose head he
would like to punch. His muttered treason occasionally bursts out into a
general commination, which includes everything English, from Gladstone down
to the meanest powder-monkey of her Majesty's fleet. It is in vain we
reason, expostulate, threaten, cajole. His rum-laden brain is proof against
all our blandishments, until, mindful that "music hath charms,"' I try the
effect of a plaintive Irish song on "the savage breast." And lo ! at the old
familiar strain the flood-gates are unloosed, and the poor, blundering,
impulsive, drink-besotted, warm-hearted bos- thoon begins to blubber like a
child.
Poor Pat! Surely
his love of country covers a multitude of sins. We get on
better after this ; but I have to sing till I am hoarse to
keep our Hibernian friend in the right key, and possibly
to preserve my pate from a punching.
We cross the
river at Dunkeld' on a pontoon raft, propelled by the
power of the current through the agency of a traveller on
a wire cable, such as we had seen on the Manawatu
River. I was informed by M'Intosh that the idea had
been borrowed from India, and introduced into New Zealand
by an engineer who had served in the East.
At Lawrence, the ancient Tuapeka (why will they
change these beautiful old native names for the vulgar patronymics of
Cockaigne?, we bid good-bye once more to the stage coach, and revert to the
iron horse. Here for the first time in all my colonial experience, I noticed
a Chinese name over a hotel. Sam Chew Lain is the Boniface of "The Chinese
Empire Hotel," nor is this the only sign of the march of civilization among
the Mongolians in New Zealand, as I found on reading the Bankruptcy list in
Dunedin the names of two Chinese market-gardeners, whose liabilities were
set down in round figures at some 600/., and their assets a modest
ten-pound note.
"Tarantara!!"
As the urbane
celestial blandly observes.
"Bankee lupchee,
welly goodee. Got him cash, got him goods. All same
Englisman. Go tloo courtee!!"—
Close by is the
famous Gabriel's Gully, which was about the first
goldfield in Otago. What a scene was this in those rude
lawless times. Every one conversant with the literature of
the early gold days, can imagine the roar and turmoil, the
ever-shifting phantasmagoria on those slopes ; and
along these flats, crowded with tents, blazing with camp
fires, and the air resounding with the din of tongue and
shovel and cradle, and not unfrequently the sharp report of firearms. Now
the little settlement is peaceful enough. There is
still one rich working up the creek, called the Blue
Spur claim, which gives employment to about one
hundred men. The houses are scattered over knolls, and up
secluded gullies, and many pretty villas surrounded with
ornamental gardens crown the ridges. There is a pretty
quiet cemetery surrounded by pines on the hill behind the town
where the coffin of many a wild and turbulent
spirit moulders. At present the trees are for the most
part leafless, and the aspect of the country is dun brown,
and bare; but in summer this must be really a pretty
district.
We pass Waitahuna, a great flat, where companies of
bestial-looking Chinamen are fossicking among the old workings. They have to
go deep now for wash dirt, but get coarse gold, very red and water-worn,
among the pebbles and drift. They are a more hang-dog set of oblique-looking
pagans than one generally sees in New South Wales. Many of them look as if
they had been in the wars.
Cultivation
extends to the very tops of the ridges here. Great armies
of gulls follow the shining ploughshare as it turns up the
teeming tilth. And I am glad to observe pleasing
evidences round every homestead that the tree- planting
fever has been pretty generally infectious.
It does one's
heart good, after the slovenly farming and tree-stumps of
some parts of Australia, to see the clean fields here. The
ploughmen of this part of Otago are famous, and the
mathematical exactitude of the long, clean furrows would
rejoice the heart of a true farmer anywhere. The train is
full of volunteers going up to Dunedin for the review and
sham-fight on the Queen's Birthday, and the run from
Milton Junction is past Lake Waihoa, Mossgiel, &c., a part
of the country which I have already described.
Having now got
back to the Otago capital, we find time to look about us,
and very soon the conviction is forced upon us that, from an architectural
point of view, Dunedin is the finest city of the whole
colony. The inequalities of her surface lines undoubtedly
aid in producing a fine effect; but the genius of her
architects, the taste and public spirit of her citizens,
and the liberality of her merchants and magnates have all
combined to adorn their hilly site, and the result is a
noble city worthy of metropolitan rank in any country.
Considering the age of the colony, I think the
progress of this city nothing short of marvellous.
Hitherto ocean steamers and big ships have had to
discharge cargoes at Port Chalmers, a small town, prettily
climbing over its rocky-peninsula at the foot of the long
firth or estuary, which extends upwards to Dunedin proper,
some eight miles.
The Dunedinites, however, have never been
satisfied with this arrangement. Year by year dredging, embanking, and other
reclaiming operations have been going on. Steadily the channel has been
deepening, and the reclaimed flats on either side broadening; and bigger and
bigger craft have been, as time passes, able to come right up the bay to the
city itself. The harbour board has expended vast sums of money on these
works, and in anticipation of the time when the leviathans of the merchant
service shall haul alongside, great wharves have been erected, mighty
storehouses line the wharves, and the reticulations of the railway system
interpenetrate both wharves and storehouses. Everything is ready for
the big steamers, and
now a monster dredge, said to be the largest on this round sphere of ours,
is busily engaged deepening the channel still further; and no doubt the time
is not far distant when the honourable ambition of Dunedin will be realized,
and she will become a port of direct call for the mightiest ocean-going
vessels of the age.
En parenthhe,
let us just for a moment recapitulate and array together these "biggest in
the world" items, of which New Zealand is so proud.
It is, indeed, a motley catalogue. First, the biggest
dredge ; then, the biggest water-wheel; next, the
biggest trout; the biggest wooden building; the highest
wooden bridge; the biggest calcareous terraces; the
biggest bird (if the moa still lives); the biggest
apples—those of the Waikato district; the biggest and most
luxurious natural warm baths; the biggest terraced
formation; the biggest glacier (that of Mount Cook—though
that is doubtful); the biggest tattooing on the biggest
reclaimed cannibal, with probably the biggest
mouth; the biggest flax-bushes; the steepest railway
incline; the biggest beds of shingle; the biggest concrete
breakwater; the biggest cabbages —if we accept the
cabbage-tree as generic; the biggest proportion of rabbits
to the acre; the biggest artesian water supply (that of
Christchurch) ; the biggest beds of watercress; the
biggest colonial debt; and as its admirers say, the
biggest hearted people, to which my own experience says
amen; and the biggest future of any of Britain's colonies,
to which with a Scotchman's proverbial caution, I say, "Weel, we'll see!"
"Nous verrons."
One of the charms of Dunedin is its irregularity
of outline. The streets are nowhere straight. To get even an approximate
idea of the city as a whole, you must mount the fine tower of the yet
incomplete town hall, or ascend the steep inclines which overlook the city,
by one of the wire tramways, which are a feature of the locomotive life of
Dunedin, or, if you are favoured with a fine day, take a drive along the
beautiful winding road, which threads the
heights of the peninsula,
between the firth and the open sea, and you will be rewarded with views of
the great city, which give you an idea of its extent and importance, such as
perhaps you could acquire in no other way.
This drive formed a memorable event in our visit. I took
with me a small select party of ladies and children, and we enjoyed the
varied scenery to our hearts' content. On the one side the cultivated slopes
leading down to the bay, on the other the frowning headlands, seagirt
cliffs, and here and there a placid inlet, although in some places old ocean
battled with the coast in its usual boisterous and hollow-sounding fashion.
Some of the surf bits were exquisite in their beauty. Descending the hill
above Portobello, however, the hired horse, which had hitherto been a
paragon of every equine virtue, began to lash out wildly with his hind legs,
and smashed the splinter bar. This finished my pleasure for the day. The
horse required all my attention now, as he had become nervous, and
manifested an insane desire to shy at every conceivable object we
encountered. I had eight miles to drive home, along the winding shores of
the bay, by the low road. There was no parapet, and the water lapped on the
"bund" or embankment all the way. My ladies were nervous ; my horse was
likewise. My road was barely wide enough for two vehicles to pass, and the
frail rope with which I had spliced my splintered splinter bar threatened
to give at every tug. Under such circumstances I must be excused if I failed
to see the vaunted beauty of Dunedin from the harbour. My wife says it was
exquisite, beautiful, lovely, &c. As a dutiful husband, I endorse the
dictum of my wife.
Dunedin from the
harbour is beautiful.
One noteworthy
feature of Dunedin, one grand feature, I may say, is its
Grand Hotel. This is unique in the Southern hemisphere,
and would not disgrace New York. Under Mr. Watson's
able management the visitor finds himself relieved
from every care. The dining-room and public drawing-rooms
are palatial apartments. The private sitting-rooms are models of elegance
and comfort. The bedrooms are without a fault, and
the bath-rooms are luxurious to a degree. The table
would satisfy the most fastidious ; and if you want a more
obliging hall-porter than "long Charley," with his
cadaverous eyes, well, you must be hard to please—that's
all.
While I am in the praising mood, I must not omit to
mention Burton Brothers for photographs of New Zealand scenery. If Bourne
and Shepherd be a household word in India for collections of photography,
surely Burton's is equally famous in New Zealand, and deservedly so. A visit
to their atelier embraces all New Zealand. You can study every phase of her
marvellous coast, every aspect of her wonderful hills, rivers, and sounds.
If you want your
portrait taken, you cannot find a better artist in that
line than Morris. One glance at his handiwork will confirm
what I say.
The churches are
really fine. The Scotch Presbyterian Church, of Otago, is well endowed,
and, much to its honour, it is a liberal patron of
education, and supports two professorships in the University. But the
First Church and Knox Church would be an ornament to any
city; and to see the dense throngs of big-headed,
intelligent men, and fresh complexioned, elegantly dressed
women, that crowd the churches is a treat In Dunedin, par
excellence, they "do not forget the assembling of
themselves together as the manner of some is." Except in Mr. Charles
Strong's church, or when Bishop Moorhouse preaches in
Melbourne, I have not, in all the colonies, seen such
packed congregations as in Dunedin.
To hear dear old
Dr. Stuart preach was in itself worth a pilgrimage. The
homely Scottish tongue, the genial mobile face, with the
earnest eyes and appealing, winning smile, the quaint
illustrations, and powerful searching home thrusts, were
those of a born preacher. Would we had more such.
I heard Dr. Roseby too. The affectionateness of the
man would open the most closely guarded soul, and let the
sweet influences of the Gospel work their will.
After what I
heard and saw in Dunedin, my heart was uplifted. Let no
one tell me that the power of the pulpit is on the wane.
The Word is "quick and powerful" still as ever it was,
where properly presented. But oh, woe is me for the
many that "sit at ease in Zion." Methinks there are
too many "dumb dogs " and "hireling shepherds" in some of the churches
nowadays.
Twenty years
ago, I saw Dunedin, when it was a rambling collection of
miserable wooden shanties. The cutting through Bell's Hill
was not then finished. If I mistake not, it was of Dunedin
mud in those days that the following satire was
concocted:—
"A new chum,
walking along the quaking morass that was then the street
(so the story goes), espied a nice new hat on the surface
of the treacherous mire. Presumably he was a web-footed
stranger, for he sallied out to pick up the hat. To
his surprise it was clutched firmly on both sides by two
bunches of digits, and he perceived it was being held On
the head of some subterranean wearer. ' Hallo!' shouted
the N. C., making a speaking-trumpet of his hands, "You
are surely in a bad way down there?' 'Oh, no! I'm all
right,' came the muffled reply. 'I'm on the top of an
omnibus.' "
The streets are
very different now. Well paved, well scavengered, and with
horse-trams running in all directions, they redound to the
credit of the city management. They have not been idiotic
enough to try and make the trains do the work of a
city railway, and consequently the public are well served.
The Water of
Leith, with Nichol's Falls, are well worthy of a visit.
Farther up, through the saddle above the falls, a recent
discovery has been made, which bids fair to introduce a
new industry. This is a deposit of shale, specimens of
which have been sent home, and have been pronounced by
experts there to be of more than usual excellence. It is in
contemplation to erect machinery and start works at an
early date, and, if all I hear be correct, there is no doubt that a highly
remunerative industry will be inaugurated.
From shale and
sermons to beer. Dunedin beer fairly rivals the renowned
brews of Auld Reekie. The populace seem also to have very
fair powers of imbibition. There are no less than
seven breweries in and around the city. This is in
keeping with almost every other branch of industry. It is
much overdone. Competition has cut prices down to the
point at which legitimate profits have almost entirely
vanished.
For keen
business competition Dunedin fairly "cows the gowan," as a
Scotchman would say. In this respect it puts Aberdeen to
the blush, and outrivals the Burra Bazaar of Calcutta. The
fact is admitted by the merchants themselves that
there is no cohesion among them. They will not combine.
They all do a "cutting game," and while the result cannot
but be beneficial to the purchasing public, I cannot see
how the sellers can reap much of a rich reward, Several
instances came under my observation, in which a
little combination as regards certain commodities with which the market was
insufficiently stocked, might have raised prices very
materially and given the merchant a legitimate profit on
his scanty stocks. But no ! Each was afraid of the
other forestalling him, or springing a surprise on
him ; and, indeed, in some cases, a smart man might have
bought goods in Dunedin, and shipping them to Melbourne or
Sydney have realized a respectable profit on his
transaction. Every merchant I spoke to on this subject
deplored the existence of such a spirit, and yet such I
suppose are the exigencies of trade, and the keenness of
the competition, that no one could afford to take his
stand, and hold for a rise. In other words, it
seems to me that there is barely sufficient trade in
Dunedin to keep all the traders going. The cry of dull
trade was no bugbear in Dunedin.
The West Coast
connection has always been an important and valuable one
for Dunedin. The mining communities on the West Coast
prefer to get their supplies from Otago; but they dearly
like also to "spoil the Egyptians," in the shape of
Dunedin men, whenever they get a chance. The Dunedinites,
it would seem, have rather arrogated to themselves the
reputation of being preternaturally knowing, and maintain
rather a supercilious attitude as regards the
intellectual, commercial, or other acumen of outsiders. So
it becomes a study with the West Coast speculator
"how to do Dunedin," i.e. it is considered no infraction of any
moral obligation, but rather a laudable achievement, to
beguile the Dunedinite out of his money under any pretence
whatever. And so the merry old game of mining swindle has
been played with variations more or less intricate, for
the last two decades at least. Enormous sums of Dunedin
capital have been invested in perfectly worthless
enterprises on the West Coast; and a swindling speculation
which consists in puffing up a "duffer claim," or
rigging UP a reputation for 'a worn-out mine, is a
favourite occupation with many keen-witted characters in
New Zealand. The claim, or mine, so manipulated, is called
"A Wild Cat." There are many legitimate mining
enterprises, and a wide field for bona-fide investment, on
the gold- fields of New Zealand, but let the prudent man
beware of "Wild Cats."
Just as a
Highlander of the days of our grandfathers looked on smugglingas a virtue,
and cheating and hoodwinking the gauger as an honourable
achievement; so the Reefton promoter or projector
looks on a Dunedinite as his fair, natural, and legitimate
prey.
I make bold to
say, however, as the result of my own rather limited
observation, that in the long run the Wild Cats get rather
the worst of the rubber with the Dunedin men. This mutual
game of "Beggar my Neighbour" does not, as may be
imagined, tend to elevate the moral tone of the
people. "Trade fictions," to use a mild phrase,, are
considered justifiable; and of a great many of the statements which the
ordinary Dunedinite may make to you on 'Change, on the
wharf, or on the market place, you might be pardoned if
you again used the caution of the Caledonian, and
whispered quietly to yourself, "Ou aye! if a' stories be
true, that ane's no' a lee."
Of course I was
prepared to find the atmosphere intensely Scotch. It was delightful to
hear the dear auld Scottish tongue, to note the
Scottish names of streets, and mark the prevailing
Scottish nomenclature on the sign-boards. But I was
scarcely prepared to find the very wine- cards in the
hotels transmogrified from French, to Scotch; and yet on
perusing the wine-carte at the Grand Hotel we found the
French "St. Julien Mc'doc" figuring as St. Julien M'Doe.
This was transposition with a vengeance surely.
I do not know whether Dunedin human nature be abnormally
litigious or not, but this I will aver —that if all the solicitors and legal
practitioners of sorts who exercise their calling in the city, make a good
living out of their clients, it would argue that litigation is pretty
lively. As with commerce, so I should imagine with law—it is surely
overdone. The city swarms with solicitors. One well-known legal firm of high
standing, and in the enjoyment of a splendid practice, have a suite of
offices that are probably unequalled for sumptuousness in any town anywhere.
The offices are worthy of a visit. The granite pillars at the doors were
specially imported. The rooms and lobbies are replete with every modern
device for luxury and adornment Gildings glisten from floor to ceiling. In
the centre is a dome of stained glass, more in keeping with a summer palace
on the Bosphorus or Guadalquiver than within the precincts of a lawyer's
sanctum. If the magnificence of the offices be at all a fair index to the
scale of fees, no wonder Otago litigants are impoverished and complaints of
dull times are rife.
A very beautiful
cemetery crowns one of the overlooking eminences, on the
north of the town; and, from its shady walks and terraces,
you can look down on the busy human hive. The long,
irregular town spreads away southward at your feet.
There is the dark-blue mass of the University, laved by the waters of the
Leith Burn, and admirably set off by the quaint red-brick
buildings, of Queen Anne style of architecture,
which form the residences of the staff of professors.
Farther along, the imposing bulk of the hospital looms up
from the valley, and then beyond, the graceful spire of
the Knox Church, the aspiring altitude of the Town Hall,
and crowning the heights, terrace on terrace of
really-beautiful houses with artistically laid-out
grounds, and the Boys' and Girls' High Schools, the
convent, the cathedral, and other great buildings breaking
the continuity and evidencing the importance of the city.
In fact nothing better perhaps is better calculated to
give the visitor an idea of the push, energy, "go"
of Dunedin, than to see how the citizens have made the
most of their difficulties of site. Great hills have been scarped away to
make room for villas. Roads have been cut right into the
solid rock, chasms have been bridged and gullies filled,
terraces and gardens formed somewhat after the similitude
of the hanging gardens of Babylon, so far as elevation is concerned;
and yet every now and then you come on a bit of the old
original bush, right in the heart of an environment of
houses and gardens. So that, as you look around, upward
and downward, and reflect that all this lavish display of
architectural and horticultural adornment has been the work
of only some twenty years, and that it has been
achieved in face of natural difficulties which force
themselves on the attention of the most cursory and
unthinking observer, you begin to realize that the
Dunedinites must have come of a good stock, and that they
do well to be proud of their natural progress.
I do most
sincerely hope that the present cloud of commercial
depression may speedily lift, and that the wheels of trade
may run merrily as of yore. |