Cambridge—Mixture of races—Our Jehu, Harry—The
Waikato river—Novel sheep feed—The Waikato terraces—A town of one
building—A dangerous pass— The lonely lovely bush—First
glimpse of Rotorua— Ohinemutu—Steams and stenches—The
primitive cooking-pot—Striking contrasts—Wailing for the dead—An
artless beggar "for the plate"—The baths—Whackarewarewa—A Maori
larder—Volcanic marvels—Subterranean activity—Barter—The road maintenance
man —Forest wealth—The track of the destroyer—The Blue
Lake—Mussel-shell Lake—Wairoa village—Kate the guide—McRae's
comfortable home.
At Cambridge there is a commodious hotel kept
by Mr. Gillett. In the big garden behind the house
I came upon many old friends—the dear wee modest daisy,
sweetwilliam, violets, old- fashioned roses, stocks,
primroses, and all the favourites of an English
garden—gooseberry bushes of something like the home
proportions, and cabbages of giant size, all spoke of a
cooler climate than that we had just left. The early
mornings, with the heavy dew begemming every leaf
and blade, and the fresh breeze scattering the liquid
pearls at every puff, are most bracing and refreshing
after the hot, languid Sydney summer. Cambridge is a neat,
though straggling town. It is fairly in the Maori country,
and groups of gaudily dressed Maoris and half-castes are
everywhere met with. Evidences of the mixture of
race are apparent in the sign-boards. Each English
announcement of the trade or profession practised inside,
is blazoned also with the Maori equivalent in Roman
letters. Owing to the admirable Maori schools, most of the
younger natives can now read and write very fairly.
Lawyers and land-agents seem to thrive here, judging from
the sign-boards. A flaring placard catches my eye, bearing
witness to the fact that on Easter Monday, after the
sports, there will be a Maori dance, proceedings to
conclude with European dances. These mixed dances, from
all accounts, are not such as St. Anthony would have
patronized.
Under the care of Harry Kerr, one of the very
nicest, most efficient, and most good-natured of
Jehus it has ever been my good fortune to encounter, we take our departure
from the hotel in the sweet, fresh morning, covered
saddle, and far as the eye can reach in front, we look
across a great strath or broad valley, all barred and
scarred, disrupted, riven, and tumbled about, into
ravines, terraces, ridges, and conical peaks, showing what
terrific and eccentric forces must have been at
work at some former epoch. We bowl rapidly along now,
crossing numerous clear brooks, their sparkling current
playing amid the vivid green of the watercress, and
forming a grateful contrast to the dun bracken and manouka
all around. In among the ridges, arc tall groups of
tree-ferns, with enormous fronds radiating gracefully from
their mossy centres. But now, with a cheery halloa
to the horses, who neigh and prick their ears
responsively, with a crack of the whip and the rattle of
hoofs, we pull up at Rose's Hotel, at Oxford; and, laden
with dust, we descend, shake ourselves, and are shown into
clean cool rooms, where we make plentiful ablutions, and
soon enjoy a most appetizing and toothsome repast. We
expect from the name to find a pretentious academic
town. Not so, however. The traveller in the colonies, soon
learns to attach mighty little significance to names. In
N.S.W., for instance, Vegetable Creek is a mining centre
with sometimes eight or nine thousand inhabitants, while
the adjacent township of Dundee, consists of two
public-houses, one store, and a few bark-covered sheds,
pigstyes, and a post-office.
The town of Oxford, however, at present, merely
consists of the hotel. It is a well-ordered, comfortable town. There
is no squabbling, because there are no neighbours; and for
the same reason, drainage and other municipal works are
all as perfect as they can make them now-a-days. For
a quiet retreat for an invalid wanting- rest and
fresh air, commend me to Oxford. Mr. Rose is a frank,
genial, hearty host. He looks as if his food agreed with
him, and his beef is the best I have tasted for twenty
years.
The next stage from Oxford is a short one, but
a toilsome. The road winds upwards through deep
cuttings, with great gorges on either side; and by-and-by
we halt to change horses at a little collection of huts,
on a lonely hillside, while far below, the concealed river
splashes and gurgles amid a forest of tree-ferns and
undergrowth. Water for the horses is here supplied by a
ram-lift from the river below.
The road on ahead is very narrow, and winds
along the side of a steep hill. There are two
dangers—one, that of falling over the siding down the
almost sheer face of the cliff; the other, that of
landslips from above. After rain, the resident groom rides
daily over the road to see that no earth-fall has taken
place during the period between his visits.
What a magnificent view lies here spread out
before us! To the left is an immense ravine, the
bed of the Waiho river. The sides of the deep valley are
clad in all the inexpressible loveliness of the New
Zealand bush. What an air of mystery hangs around its
deep, dark recesses ! How vivid are the varied shades of
glossy green, lit up by the passing sunbeam! What a rare
radiance shines out, from what was but now a gloomy depth,
as the rapid clouds flit past, and let the sunshafts
dart far into the nooks, where the most exquisite
forms of fern life are "wasting their sweetness." The
defile here is 830 feet deep from where the coach passes,
and on the other side of the narrow neck of land over
which we roll, another equally deep and equally lovely
valley spreads its beauties before our admiring eyes.
Then we enter the hoary, silent bush, and for
twelve miles we drive through a perfect avenue of
delights. Here is the giant pittosperum : there the tall
totarah. Multitudes of ratas, having coiled round some
fated giant of the forest, with their Laocoon-like
embrace, now rear aloft their bloated girth ; and all
around are ferns, creepers, llianas,. orchids, trailing
drapery, exquisite mosses, and all the bewildering beauty
of the indescribable bush.
For nearly two hours, we wend our entranced
way through this realm of enchantment. Every
revolution of the silent wheels over the soft, yielding, but springy
forest-road, reveals some fresh charm, some rarer vision
of sylvan beauty. And yet it is very still. No sound of
bird, no ring of axe here. All is still, as if under a
spell—and insensibly we become hushed and almost awed, as
we look up to the giant height of the mossy pines and
totaras, or peer into the shadowy arcades where exquisite
ferns and creepers trail their leafy luxuriance over the
rotting tree-trunks, as if to hide the evidences of decay
beneath their living mantle of velvety green.
Presently the track widens and the forest gets
thinner. We round a rocky bluff, and there— before
us, far below, in the distance—shimmering through the
tree-boles as if the azure vault had fallen to earth, we
get our first glimpse of Rotorua.
Mokoia Island in the centre, white cliffs on the
further side, faint curling cloudlets of steam on the
hither shore. There is a general long-drawn sigh,
and then exclamations of pleasure, delight, and surprise
burst from every lip.
We receive a hearty, noisy greeting from a
cartload of merry Maoris as they drive past, and very
shortly we rattle across the bridge over the hot steaming
creek, and find ourselves at friend Kelly's Palace Hotel,
in far-famed Ohinemutu.
Steam everywhere, and an
all-pervading sulphurous stench, apprise us very forcibly that we are now.
in the hot lake country. After a luxurious half-hour spent in the warm
natural bath attached to the hotel, we take a languid stroll down by the
beach, and survey the native settlement. The evening meal—potatoes and
whitebait—is being cooked. The sound of incessant ebullition is at first
almost awe inspiring. One realizes what a thin crust alone intervenes
between one's shoe soles and the diabolical seething cauldron beneath. Naked
children are bathing in a deep pool by the lake. Culinary matrons, gaudily
dressed of course, squat and gossip round the steaming, sputtering holes, in
which their viands are being cooked, and beguile the time by desperate pulls
at black, evil-smelling cutty-pipes. To a tattooed group sitting round the
great council-hall an English interpreter is retailing the items of interest
from a recently arrived newspaper. What a contrast is here? The great whare
is carved with all sorts of hideous, grotesque images. Surely, even in the
wildest delirium, or the most dire nightmare, we've never seen such
outrageous effigies. Surmounting a post used as a flagstaff, is a
goggle-eyed monstrosity, with gaping jaws and lolling blood-red tongue;
while close by, out nearer the point which forms the burial-place of the
tribe, and was formerly a fortified pah, stands a neat little English
church, with a pathway
of shining white shells; and one's thoughts cannot help reverting to the
stories of strife and treachery, and cannibalism, and all the horrors of
pagan cruelty, now happily banished for ever before the gentle, loving
message of the Cross.
A long-drawn, wailing, dirge-like cry proceeds
from one inclosure. Looking in we see a company of
women, seated in rows beside a tent, crooning and keening
with a strangely weird inflection; and peering further, we
are soon able to discover the Cause. Beneath the canvas
lies a figure draped in white—so stiff, so rigid. No
motion in those stiff, extended limbs. An old chief,
weeping copious tears, sits beside his dead son,
patting the poor unconscious corpse, with a curiously
pathetic tenderness. The old woman who officiates as chief
mourner, waves a fan backward and forward over the poor dead face; and
as the "keen" rises and falls with its wailing
cadences, we reverently uncover in the presence of the
dead, and recognize the common tie of humanity, in the
grief that comes to all alike.
Next morning (Good Friday) there was a native
service in the little church. One buxom lass, in
garments of rainbow hue, accosts us, wanting "change for a
shilling."
"What for?" we asked.
"Put sikeepence in plate," she said; "shillin'
too much." Artless maid!
Another one, more mercenary still, unblushingly
begged for the sixpence itself for the same sacred
purpose. No doubt she had heard of "spoiling the
Egyptians."
I am reminded by this, of a famous old Calcutta
merchant who was no less noted for his great
wealth, than for his niggardliness. Coming out of church
one day, a merry wag, seeing the rupee for the plate,
ostentatiously held between the finger and thumb of the
merchant, and wishing to test him, tapped him on the
shoulder and whispered,—
"I say, S—, can ye lend me a rupee for the
plate?"
"Ou aye," readily responded S—.
Then second thoughts having seemingly
intervened, he muttered,—
"It's a' richt, I'll pit it in for ye," which he
did, but my friend narrowly watched him, and saw that
he only put in one rupee for the two. Old S—
doubtless thought the rupee would be credited in the
celestial treasury as his own offering, yet nevertheless
he sent his Durwan, next morning, to demand repayment from
my waggish friend. Old S— would have possibly found his
match in our simple Maori maiden.
The "tangi," as the funeral feast and ceremony
is called, was now in full swing. The weeping and
wailing were even more demonstrative than that of the day
previous ; but we were told that the evening would be
wound up with a general gorge, and possibly a drunken
spree.
In the church the men sat on one side and the
women on the other. The singing was pleasing, but
peculiar. The strains reminded me somewhat of India. We
went all through the neglected graveyard. We peeped into
many of the little pent-house receptacles for the dead,
and saw coffins both big and small, and then after a
glorious bath in the Madame Rachel Fountain down at
Sulphur Point, we lunched, and started for Wairoa.
On this side, the lake is bordered by a great
flat plain, and at Sulphur Point—as it is called—
lies the Government township. The only buildings at present are—the
Government baths, the post and telegraph office, a
spacious empty hospital, and doctor's and attendants' quarters. The
baths are well arranged, capitally managed, and
every comfort is provided in the shape of towels,
shower-bath, and all the usual accessories of a modern
hydropathic establishment. During our stay we tried the
temper of all the baths. We found the Priest's bath the
warmest and most relaxing, but for pure unalloyed
Sybaritic deliciousness the Madame Rachel takes the palm.
The water is alkaline, and makes the skin feel velvety
soft; and, in short, the sensations are simply perfectly
pleasurable.
On the margin of the plain proceeding towards
Wairoa, at the base of a burnt cindery-looking pile
of scarped cliffs, we see great gouts and bursts of steam
escaping from various centres of activity, and a white
cloud rests over an open space, which, as the wind ever
and anon lifts the vapoury veil, is found to contain a
village, consisting of a few whares and huts, with groups of
natives moving to and fro.
This is the Geyser village of
Whackarewarewa —pronounced Whack-a-reewa-reewa. Crossing a high wooden
bridge, which spans a rapid noisy stream, we enter the village. The first
man we meet is a tall native attired in the garb of a priest, with rosary
and crucifix round his neck, and he affably returns our salutation. In some
gardens, bunches of home grown tobacco are hanging to dry under a thatch of
raupo. Behind this hut a
huge dead pig is strung up. It needs little hanging, as,
judging from certain sensations, we can certify that it is high enough
already. Peeping into this zinc-plate-covered larder, we find a collection
of scraps that would make a beggar turn green; and a great gory boar's head,
black and nasty-looking, stares at us with lack-lustre eyes from the top of
a pile of potatoes. Verily the Maoris are not dainty feeders, but of this
anon. We have to enter our names in a book, and submit to a mild extortion
of sundry small coins, and then a motley cavalcade of children, tattooed old
men, women with infants astride their backs, laughing girls, and begging
half-breeds, escort us to see the wonders of the place.
What a scene of desolate grandeur ! The
background—of limestone cliffs, with great white seams
and landslips, which look like the marks of old wounds.
Beneath and around a perfect vortex of most malevolent
activity and boiling confusion. Sputtering pot-holes here,
spouting geysers there. Roaring steam escapes, shrill,
whistling fissures. Hoarse, bellowing fog-horns
everywhere. On this side, fierce ebullition; on that, a
gentle sputtering and simmering. Here a noiseless
steaming, and there a blast as if Apollyon were bad with
catarrh, and were blowing his nose in a rage; and over all
the unmistakable odour which popular legend has ever
attributed to the atmosphere of the infernal regions.
The presence of sulphur is further fully betokened
by the beautiful yellow efflorescence and little caverns
of orange crystals round most of the holes.
Here is the great Geyser itself—one of the most
active in this district of incessant volcanic action.
Great swelling volumes of boiling water rush up
fiercely in hissing hot columns. These plash and tumble
madly back, and are again shot forth, and billow over a
white encrusted face of fretted rock, into a hole of
mysterious depth; and as the steam is ever and anon wafted
aside, the intense blue of the unfathomed depth is seen
like a sapphire set in an encrustation of whitest marble.
Wonder upon wonder here. We stand on a
thin echoing crust of pumice and silica, with a
raging hell beneath our feet. Steam and boiling water
issue from every chink and cranny, and yet at the foot of
the crested reef—so close that we could dip our foot into
it—flows the purling, plashing stream, so cool, so fresh-looking, with
trailing masses of aquatic weeds, swaying to and fro in
the swift current.
Over the river—what a contrast. If here be
life, brightness, intense activity, what have we
there ? A black, oozy, slimy flat; sulphurous steam, too,
hangs over the Stygian, quaking bog ; but instead of azure
water, only bubbling, lethargic mud comes, with a thick,
slab mass ; seething, in horrible suggestiveness of
witches' broth and malignant wizard spells. One could
fancy the flat a fit abode for ghouls, vampires, and evil
spirits. While the living stream, the pure white
and deep blue of the terraces, and lively pools, might be
the chosen abode of spirits of healing and beneficence.
The sound is indescribable. You hear the thump, thump, as
of pent-up engines. The din confuses you ; and as you hear
it gradually softening in the distance, you begin to realize
what an awful thing is nature, and what an atom is
man.
Let us look for a brief instant at this deep
pellucid pool. Clear as is the water, the eye cannot
penetrate far into the unequalled blue of its mysterious depths. It is
perfectly still. A quivering steam hovers on its surface.
So innocent and inviting it looks. And yet it would boil the flesh
from your bones did you but trust yourself to its
siren seductiveness. At one pit mouth close by, the
mephitic breath from below has bleached the overhanging
scrub to a ghastly yellowish white. It is shudderingly
suggestive of grave-clothes. The marvels are legion. The
sensations they excite I shall not attempt to analyze. It
is a memory to linger with one for a lifetime.
Commerce here has her votaries, however. One
Maori offers us a carved stick for sale. Mistaking
us for a Rothschild, he demands a pound for the product of
his industry, but without a blush eventually transfers the stick at a
reduction of only fifty per cent.; and we are presently
thrown into paroxysms of gratification by the information
which is volunteered by an acid old cynic, that "if
we had on'y bluffed the beggar, we mout a 'ad it for five
bob."
Entering our vehicles again, we sweep once more
through the plain in the direction of the lake, and
crossing the river begin to climb the skirting hills, by a
long, devious, dusty track. Presently we pass a lonely
tombstone, sacred to the memory of a drunken Maori, who
broke his neck by falling from his horse while returning
from a festive party, about a year ago.
Gazing through a narrovv gorge on the right, we
see the long square table-top of steep Horo Horo;
the intervening champaign being a succession of those
terraces and ravines and cones, so characteristic of "all the region round
about."
This district has not yet
"been through the land court," as is the phraseology of our informant. The
precise ownership is not yet finally determined. And so, as there is no
safe title procurable, there is no tenancy. This explains what I had been
remarking, namely, the absence of flock or herd or house or tilled field.
And yet, there is grand pasturage among these hollows. The briar is fast
becoming a dangerous pest here, as in parts of Australia. The Maoris are too
lazy to milk cows, so they do not keep them. The whole district, so far as
being made productive goes, is a sad wilderness—a regrettable waste. It is
Good Friday, and yet here is a road-maintenance man, hard at work, with his
shovel and pick and barrow.
"What, Jim? workin' on Sunday?" says Joe,
our driver.
"Oh, if I wasn't workin', some blasted cove, wot
wants my billet, 'ud be makin' remarks. They can't
say much if I keeps at it. 'Sides there ain't much to do
here if I was idle, 'cept it might be to get drunk."
With which philosophical summing-up the old
fellow shovelled away again. What a grim satire on
the resources of modern civilization, and the brotherly
love of the 'orny 'anded to each other!
Now we enter the cool green bush, with its
pleasant shade, its humid smell, and all the lovely
profusion of its ever-changing forms of vegetable beauty.
Who could ever tire of the glorious bush of this
magnificent country? What a contrast to the sombre
monotony of the Australian forest.
Ferns!!! "Ram! Ram! Sita Ram!!! Could
anything be more exquisite?
Tree fuchsias!! As big as gum-trees.
Pittosperum!!! Giants of convoluted shrubbery.
Llianas, and supple-jacks, and creepers!!
festooning the forest, like boas and pythons of a
new order of creation.
Mosses!! Never was carpet woven in loom half
so exquisite.
And here, too, the "trail of the serpent is over
all." The woodcutter is making sad havoc with this
peerless bush. Deep ruts, with ruthlessly felled
shrubbery, and withering branches on either side, lead
away into the bosky dells, where the mossy giants, with
all their adornment of orchid, and trailing fern, and
hoary lichen, shiver under the fell strokes of the
lumber-man, and bow their stately heads and fall to rise
no more. Henceforth, for the clean, sappy wood, the odour of red
herring and the smell of sperm candles take the
place of the faint fresh scent of morning in the dewy
glade, where the moss and wild flowers send up their sweet
kisses ; and we can almost fancy the giant shuddering as
the ripping-saw tears at his vitals, or weeping, as the
nails are driven, that forces him to embrace the oilman's
or the chandler's distasteful wares.
What ho! What fresh beauty is this awaiting
us? Here is surely the sweetest, prettiest, little
lake ever sun shone on or wind caressed. It is the Blue
Lake—Tikitapu—home of the dreaded Taniwha (the Taniwha is
the water-kelpie of the Maoris). How perfectly beautiful
looks the lake, embosomed amid her surrounding craggy
hills! The white gleam of this landslip from the pumice
cliff, contrasts so sharply with the deep sombre
shadow of the wooded dell beside. Here at our feet is a
semi-circular beach of white ashes, with a lapping fringe
of olive-green ripplets ; and on the lake's clear bosom
the breeze raises thousands of tiny wavelets, that sparkle
and flash as if silver trout were chasing each other in
myriads ; while, at times, a gust comes sweeping through
the ravines, and raises great black bars of shadow on
the face of the waters.
We cross a narrow neck, and there down, down,
eighty feet below, lies another larger and not less
lovely sheet of water, Lake Rotokakahi, or Musselshell Lake. It stretches
away before us, a plain of burnished silver for about four
miles. It is bounded opposite to us by a buttressed,
flat-topped range of steep mountains, along whose base,
and skirting the lake for its entire distance, winds the
road to Taupo and Napier. Away at the far end lies
a small islet, like a waterfowl at rest, and yet farther
away, looking soft in the blue haze of distance, beyond
the low green hills that bound the farther extreme of
Rotokakahi, rises a mighty crest, beneath whose ample
shadow reposes another, and yet another lake. Words
utterly fail to depict the magic beauty of this wondrous
region.
At our feet, nestling amid willows and fruit
trees, and cheered by the babble of the noisy
brook, lies Wairoa.
What noisy, jabbering crew have we here?
They are dirty, ragged, boisterous, uncivil, rude.
These are the poorest specimens of natives we have yet
seen. Dogs, pigs, children, lads and lasses, all unite in
emulating Babel. They are all aggressive. They have been
spoiled completely by the tourists taking too much notice
of them and treating them too liberally, and now they are
an unmitigated nuisance.
We were introduced to Kate the famous guide,
recipient of the Humane Society's medal, and quite
a well-known character in the lake country. We found Kate
to be, judging by first impressions, a gentle, soft-voiced
woman, rather deaf, and, if anything, somewhat stupid. One should be
cautious of first impressions.
We are glad at last to escape from the noise
into one of Mrs. McRae's natty, quiet ^bedrooms, and
under McRae's hospitable roof we gladly rest for
the night.
Comfort is not the word. McRae's is not an
hotel—it is a home. Could any word convey a higher
appreciation of his princely fare and his ever wakeful
consideration for the comfort of his guests ?
Hurrah! the Terraces to-morrow!! And now to
sleep.
"To sleep, but not to rest." |