Good-bye to the bluff—A rough passage—Tasmania
in the distance—Coast scenery—A nautical race—Ocean
fisheries—Neglected industries—Fish-curing—Too much
reliance on State aid—The view on the Derwent— Hobart from
the sea—An old-world town—"No spurt about the
place"—Old-fashioned inns—Out into the country—A Tasmanian
squire—The great fruit industry —A famous orchard—Young
Tasmanians—The hop industry—Australian investments—The
Flinders Islands —A terra incognita—Back to Melbourne.
The icy breath
of the South Antarctic was causing finger-tips to tingle as we steamed away
from Invercargill in the good ship Wairarapa, and left
the shores of Maoriland to fade away in the blue
haze of distance. What a feast of picturesque grandeur and
beauty had we not stored up in memory! What visions of the
wondrous glory of the Almighty's creative skill did we not
recall as we pondered over the incidents of our all too
short summer holiday ! And yet we had not half exhausted
the marvels of this land of wonders. The weird solemnity
of Lake Taupo, with its volcanic eruptions and abysmal
activities ; the awful majesty and rugged grandeur of the
Alpine gorges and passes; the labyrinthine intricacies and
astounding sinuosities of the West Coast Sounds, with
their startling contrasts of bluff and craggy peak, dashing cascade, and
calm azure depths of unfathomable sea, heaving gently at
the foot of beetling cliffs—the perils of mountain ascent,
over glittering glacier and tumbled moraines—the blushing
vintage and orchard bounty of the far north— the billowy
prairies of rustling grain in the more robust south;—all
these we might have witnessed, had time been at our
disposal; but all these, and marvels many times
multiplied, may be seen by any one possessed of leisure
and means, who may, after reading these notes of mine,
feel the impulse born within him to follow our example,
and pay a visit to this glorious country. I once read a
book on the marvels of India entitled, "Wanderings of
a Pilgrim in Search of the Picturesque." There be
many pilgrims now-a-days after the same quest; but India
and all the magnificence and colouring of Oriental pomp
and luxury—all the barbaric splendour of "the land of the peacock's
throne"— cannot, I think, compare with the majestic
prodigality, the lavish adornment with which Nature has
so generously and richly attired the mountains, plains,
lakes, forests, and coasts of New Zealand. For variety of
natural scenery I do not think any country on our planet
can vie with it. Little wonder, then, that any one having
a soul in harmony with the beautiful in Nature, ever so little,
and gifted, if even but sparingly, with the faculty
of expression, should revel in description of these
wonders. As a countryman of Burns and Scott, I confess I
could not resist the impulse, and if I have given any of
my readers only a tithe of the pleasure by my descriptions
that the actual witnessing of the scenery itself has given
me, then I feel that I am repaid for all my. scribe
labour; and possibly, if I have been the means of
exciting a desire to behold for one's self the wonders of
Maoriland, I will reap a rich reward of kindly benediction
by-and-by, I am sure, from travellers who may follow my
footsteps, checking my accuracy and sharing in my delight.
We had a rough,
nasty passage to Tasmania. The bounding billows of the
South Pacific belie their name; and the peristaltic motion
they impart to the diaphragm begets tendencies the very
reverse of pacific. "The vasty deep" in these southern
regions gets very much mixed and tumbled up, in the
winter months, and the accompaniment to the cheerful
whistling of the merry winds in the rigging, was a series
of groanings almost too deep for utterance in the cabins below. We were
glad when the bold coast of Tasmania hove in sight. Cape
Pillar was the first promontory to greet us. Certes, how
the icy blasts shrilly piped their roundelay. The
spray from the cut-water hissed past us as we stood on the
poop, and made the skin tingle, as from the lash of a
whip. As we got abreast of Port Arthur, the scene of
horrors and cruelties and iniquities of demoniac intensity
in the old convict times, the elements quieted down
somewhat, and we were able to enjoy the varied panorama
that rapidly unfolded itself before us as we sped swiftly
along.
Dense forests
clothe the country from the far- off inland hills down to
the cliffs that guard the coast. At Cape Raoul the basaltic columnar
formation of the coast is very strikingly displayed. The cliffs jut
out in serried series of mighty pillars, just like the
perpendicular pipes of a great natural organ. The blast
wails and shrieks amid the nooks and crannies, and anon
sobs with a gurly undertone of lamentation as it
whistles past. All the cliffs in shadow are white with
hoar frost, and their minute icicles glitter like
diamonds, while the sunny portions, wetted with spray,
gleam with a sheen which is positively dazzling.
Now Storm Bay opens out before us. As if to sustain
its reputation, the icy blast comes swirling round the snowy summit of
Mount Wellington with augmented force, and chills us to the marrow. We
were informed that snow on Mount Wellington is abnormal. Anyway the
nightcap was on when we were there, and the weather was bitterly cold.
Now we catch the gleam of a white lighthouse on a small island right
ahead. Lovely bays open out on the right. The long, glistening estuary
of the Derwent, studded with the bleached sails of numerous yacht-like
craft. The long blue indistinctness of the river line of the Huon, with
here and there a sail relieving the uniformity of tint. The swelling
forest-clad hills closing up the background, and now the homesteads and
green fields here and there dotting the long acclivity in front, all
made up a scene which for breadth, animation, brightness, prettiness,
you would find it hard to beat anywhere. The knolls at the mouth of the
inner bay are quite park-like with their clumps of bosky wood. Round the
various points, sailing close up in the wind, creep whole flotillas of
fishing and trading ketches. Tasmanians are famed for their dashing
seamanship. The broad estuary is thronged as if a regatta were being
held. Some of the ketches lie very l<j>w in the water, and some heel
over in regular racer fashion. Most of them have a deep centre-board.
Ask the skipper where is his load-line. .He will answer, "Up to the main
hatch." They are manned by a hardy, adventurous race, who number among
their ranks some of the very finest boat sailors in the world. What
splendid herring fishers they would make! Yes, if we only had the
herring!
And yet
around the Australian coasts what hauls might be made
with proper appliances, and what a source of wealth
have we not in the teeming millions of fish that haunt the shores, and
breed among the islets and in every bay and
estuary. Here is another of the neglected industries that might give
employment to hundreds of our colonial youth. It needs
no coddling by the State. It would flourish without
the aid of fustian claptrap. It might exist without
any custom-house interference. All that is wanted is
energy, enterprise, a little daring, and hardihood, a little
common-sense organization, and the machinery for disposing of the fish
after they are caught. If some enterprising capitalist would only import
a crew from Cornwall, or Montrose, or Buchan, or Lerwick, to show our
Australian youngsters how they do it in the more treacherous and
boisterous seas of the inclement north. I think the venture would pay a
good dividend; and I am quite sure every well-disciplined and properly-
balanced gastronomic mind would hail such an attempt to introduce a
change .from the eternal "chop, steak, and sausages," with a chorus of
benediction.
[Since the above was penned, an effort has been
made to acclimatize this well-known fish. A large
consignment of herring ova was sent out to Melbourne, but
unfortunately on being opened, the whole shipment was
found to have gone bad. There is little doubt that the
trial will again be made, and that the introduction of
this valuable fish is only a matter of time.]
In New Zealand,
fish-curing is a thriving and lucrative calling. In every
hotel delicious smoked fish form a never-failing adjunct
to the breakfast table. Large quantities are exported and
reach Victoria, and go to other parts. Why can we not do
likewise in New South Wales? Again I ask—is it
ignorance, or apathy/ sloth, want of energy and
enterprise, or what is it? Are we so mildewed and
emasculated with the eternal molly-coddle of the
Government pap boat, that we cannot launch out and start a
new industry like this by private enterprise?
Has the dry rot
of subsidy and bonus so wizened us up that all private
initiation and independent effort is atrophied? Surely
when natural channels pf enterprise such as this exist,
and are only waiting to be tried seriously and sensibly,
to succeed—nay, to brilliantly succeed—is it not folly —is
it not sinful, for patriots with exuberant verbosity, to
get up and demand that the State shall impose protective
duties on this and that industry, thus hampering the free play of
commercial activities, strangling all noble self-reliance,
and crushing all independent spirit out of a people
already deeply infected with the demoralizing
doctrine that the State is to do everything, and that
private pluck and enterprise are a mistake and a delusion.
Some time ago
several Chinamen started fish- curing on one of the
northern lakes in New South Wales, and at the time I knew
the place, they were doing well and making a good thing
out of it. But then there arose vicious and evil
practices, such as the sinful slaughter of myriads of
young fry— the use of illegal nets, the wholesale
destruction of spawn by means of dynamite, &c., and I
believe the fishing on that part of the coast was pretty
well murdered. It is a saddening and a humiliating reflection that,
with all our self-complacency and self-congratulations
about our marvellous resources and wonderful natural
wealth, we really do so mighty little practically to
develop the one or utilize the other.
Possibly the hardest-working and most self- reliant
class we have in the Australian community, it seems to me, are our
miners or diggers and prospectors; and upon my word, our mining
legislation generally, seems deliberately designed with the object of
making things as hard for the miner, and putting as many obstructions
and impediments in his way, as possible.
But to hark
back. Here I am off the track again, and pursuing my
impetuous way from smoked fish to mining reserves,
without ever a thought towards the patience of my
readers!
One of the
most prominent features that shows boldly out from the
background of boscage as the visitor nears the narrows
of the Derwent, from the open roadstead, is a gigantic
shot tower, which must have been built in the very
early days when the Hentys were pioneers over on the
Victorian coast, and when the clanking irons of the
chain gang must have been a constant sound in the
infant settlement. Let the reader get that weird and awful
record of the convict system, contained in Marcus
Clark's novel, "His Natural Life," and he will then
have an idea of what man's inhumanity to man is
capable of. The old tower is not the only evidence of
antiquity about the place, as we shall presently see.
Meantime look at the chequered patterns on the
hill-sides. Black ploughed fields alternate with the
squares of green young crops, and these again with
symmetrically arranged orchards and vineyards. Yes,
this is the chosen home at the antipodes of the
ruddy-cheeked and golden-haired Pomona. One can almost
fancy there is a fruity fragrance floating on the
breezes that sweep over the laden trees. Away to the
left, the long gleaming water-way of the tortuous Huon,
crowded with ketches, wanders in and out among
the hills, which are here clothed from base to summit
with forests of blue and red gum, stringy bark,
Tasmanian cedar, and other valuable timber trees.
Now as we
glide onward, the homely old city opens out, backed by
the steep bulk of Mount Wellington, whose tawny shoulders are now
streaked with drifted snow. A fortress is here also in
course of construction, though it seems, to my
civilian eye, to be easily dominated by the heights at
the back. Here lies Hobart at our feet, shining in the
sun, and climbing, in errant and leisurely fashion,
the easy slope which trends upwards from the water's
edge.
A knoll
projects out into the water in the middle of the city,
and the houses cluster thickly round the two bays thus
formed. The farther one is seemingly the busiest, as
there are the wharves, warehouses, and populous
streets. The warehouses are enormous. The roofs are lichened and
grey with age. Alas ! they are mostly empty.
The old whaling days, and the days when large convoys
sailed in from their six months' voyage, with
Government stores and European goods have gone, never
to return. The great barracks and long dormitories are
silent and deserted now. The big stone buildings,
built with a solidity which is all unknown to the
contractors of this shoddy age, have a forlorn and
desolate look, and there is an unmistakable air of
decayed gentility and departed grandeur about the place which is
somewhat depressing. Away on the left, at the head of
the little bay, a multitude of gleaming white
tombstones marks the site of the city of the dead.
These look like the great white bones of stranded
whales bleaching and glistening in the sun. To the
extreme right a fine stately mass of warm- tinted
buildings flanks the city, and affords a charming
relief to the eye, as it crowns the low eminence on
which it is set. This is Government House, and round
about it, encompassing it with a band of silver,
steals the gently flowing Derwent, winding past a
broken chain of wooded bluffs, which terminate the
vista in a confused mist of leafy luxuriance.
We are now
nearing the massive wharf. There is timber enough in
the structure to make a dozen of our modern wharves.
What an old-world look the place has! Many of the
houses are built of red bricks, the roofs are brown
with lichen, and wrinkled with old age. And yet there
is an absence of life and a want of energy and bustle.
Lots of badly-dressed young hoodlums loll about,
leaning against the great stacks of shingles
(Hobart palings) which are piled up in vast quantities ready for
export. Of these are the fruit-cases made, which take
away the wealth of the orchards, for which the island
is famous—groups of young girls saunter about
arm-in-arm; queer old habitues, clad in quaint
garments of antique cut, hobble about and exchange
nautical observations with each other. Several
dismantled whalers lie at their moorings, and the huge
warehouses hem in the scene—silent, deserted, empty.
"There ain't
no spurt about the place!" ejaculates an observant Yankee
fellow-passenger; and he aptly enough expressed the
sensation it gives one who witnesses the whole scene
for the first time.
Time seems
to be measured by Oriental standards here. All work is
done in a leisurely fashion. An old horse is
discharging cargo by means of a whim, instead of a
steam crane, from a Dutch-looking lugger. Piles of hop
bales litter the landing-place, and it would seem
almost as if their hypnotic influence had cast a
sleepy spell over the whole environment. The very
steeples on the old grey churches in the city seem to
nod in the gathering haze, and the smoke from the
chimneys curls aloft in a somewhat aimless fashion,
as if the fires below were all only half alight. An
enthusiastic Victorian cannot refrain from commenting on this
general attitude of sleepiness.
"Humph,"
says he; "there's the effects of free trade for ye—not
a blessed factory or a steam engine in the whole
place!"
A little boy
with a wan, pinched face, and the shabby-genteel look
which patched and darned but scrupulously clean
clothes gives to the wearer, now accosts us. "Board
and residence, sir?" he pipes in a squeaky treble.
Poor little fellow, doubtless a sad tale he could
tell. And so my gentle little travelling companion
with a woman's quick imagination, begins to weave a
romance of misfortune and penury, in which the little
tout figures as the heir of a noble but decayed
family. The mother, a fragile uncomplaining martyr,
faithful to the shattered fortunes of a gallant husband,
and so on and so on! All this was poured into
my ears as we sped along, and it was with much
difficulty I restrained the tender-hearted little dame
from trotting back to verify her romance from the poor
boy himself.
In the
summer season most of the houses are let to visitors
from Sydney and Melbourne, and there are certainly
large numbers of decayed gentlewomen and retired
officers on half-pay, and such like, who eke out their
slender incomes in this fashion.
Here is
another evidence of the antiquity of the place. The
names of the curious old inns—they transport one back
to dear Old England at once. Here is The Queen's
Plead, The Bell and Dragon, The Eagle Hawk, the
Maypole Inn, and so on through all the old familiar
nomenclature. The gable ends elbow their way into the
streets ; the bow windows project over the pavements;
the mossy roofs, with quaint dormer windows half
hidden by trailing creepers, the stone horse troughs
and mounting steps, the dovecotes and outside
stone stairs to the stables, the old stone walls
bulging out in places and tottering to their fall, all
speak of "merrie England;" and one can scarce fancy
that these dull dead masses on the distant hills are
gum-trees, and that this is part of Australasia.
We quickly
hire an open landau and are driven by a rosy-faced
young Jehu into the open country. The suburbs are very
pretty. We pass beautifully- kept gardens, rich lawns,
handsome stone houses. Ever and anon one of these
quaint old inns. Churches are plentiful. Some have
square towers, and are covered with red tiles, which
give a warm touch of colour to the landscape. We pass
the old orphan schools, now used as an invalid
station. Yonder is a pottery—there a bone mill. Here
the show and cricket grounds. On all hands grand
orchards of great extent, trim rows of cottages,
country houses standing back amid great plantations of
symmetrically planted fruit-trees. On the right the
Elwick racecourse, with its grand stand of red brick,
and the Launceston railway, running close by; and now
in front, the silvery Derwent opens out like a lake;
and as we gaze across Glenorchy, with its hop kilns and tannery, and the
pretty village of Bryant's Bridge sheltered by high
wooded ranges, and nestling cosily round the old
square-towered rustic church, we feel the whole charm of
the place stealing upon us, and no longer wonder
at the fair daughters of Tasmania so loyally maintaining the
supremacy of their little island for natural beauty
against all rivals.
Having heard
so much of the fruit-growing industry of Tasmania, I was anxious to see
an orchard for myself. Fortunately, we shared common
interests with one of the fine old pioneers of the
island, a grand old English gentleman, with cheeks as
rosy as his own apples, and a heart as sound and ripe
as the sweetest and best of them, though his hair was
now whitening, like the almond blossom before the door
of his hospitable mansion.
Turning up a
lane, between sweet-smelling hedges and goodly rows of
chestnuts, with a great expanse of pleasant
fruit-trees on either hand, we accordingly drove up to the old
manor-house, and politely inquired for the proprietor.
Our advent had already been observed, and out came the
old squire himself to receive us; and no sooner did
we make ourselves known to him, than the hearty
English welcome we received made us more than ever
doubtful that we were not the sport of some beneficent
fairy, and that we were not really back in the old
country after all.
The
manor-house, with its many buildings, was the very
picture of an old English homestead. The spacious
courtyard, green with grass, surrounded by the stables, barns, and
outhouses; the running brook close by, wimpling
merrily over its pebbly bed; and all around, the trim
avenues of neatly pruned fruit-trees and bushes, with
the big black bulk of the wooded mountain in the rear,
—composed such a picture of rural happiness and
contentment as is rarely seen out of "Merrie England."
Then the smell of apples about the place. Apples by
the ton in the long low lofts and cool spacious
granaries ; apples and almonds of the choicer sorts in
the verandahs and in sweetly-scented rooms. In the
orchard a lovely pond, green with mosses, lustrous
with the sheen of sun and water, and fringed with
loveliest ferns, was well stocked with fish, which are
here acclimatized, and from which the streamlets are being
stocked. From the spacious verandah we look
right across the fertile valley to "Rest Down," the
earliest settlement in the island, so called because
the first people "rested down" here in old Governor
Collins's time. Then the broad sweep of the river
intervenes, and fifty miles off, the great dividing
range of the Table Mountain closes in the scene. The
remains of the first chimney built on Tasmanian soil
was visible at Rest Down up to twenty years ago.
This
particular orchard comprises forty-five acres. Last
year the owner sold 2000 bushels of gooseberries, 3000
bushels of currants, and other fruits, including
apples. In two years he raised fifty tons of
strawberries on the estate. For the last twelve years
the average return per acre has been over 60/. I saw
two and a half acres of gooseberry bushes, from which
500 bushels of fruit are picked every year, and which
are sold at 4s. 6d. per bushel. This beats wheat
hollow. On the other side of the estate I was shown
over ten acres of fine black soil, beautifully worked,
and kept as clean as a Behar indigo field. During the
ninth year of its cultivation this small patch yielded
1000 bushels gooseberries and 2000 bushels apples,
for which the ruling prices are £4. 6d. to £5. per
bushel. And yet if one talks to the ordinary run
of Australian farmers about new products, about
fruit-growing, tomatoes, vines, oil crops, anything
out of the eternal old grind of wheat, and other usual
cereals, he is laughed at, sneered at, jeered at, and
stigmatized as visionary, conceited, and goodness only
knows what else.
Black
currant bushes were shown me here, which yield two,
and even three bushels per plant, and the fruit is
sold readily at 11s. per bushel. To show the enery and
practical, management of my host, he showed me where
he had walled up a flood-water creek, which used
formerly to run riot through the orchard, and the land
so reclaimed was being levelled and planted with young
trees. He had cut down bush trees and saplings, and
made a corduroy road of these, on which he was
carting his soil, stones, and material for the work of
reclamation. As the garden grew at the far end, the
corduroy road was taken up and the wood used for fuel,
and the very road was being dug up and made eligible
for the reception of more young trees. Nothing is
wasted under his able management. Manure is liberally
applied, and the inevitable result was everywhere
apparent in bounteous returns and substantial plenty.
Along the
roads were belts of walnut-trees, and several
magnificent almond-trees were pointed out to me, of
the fruit of which I partook, and found the almonds
simply delicious. And yet such is the prejudice or
apathy of the general public, that, my host informed
me, his almonds were a drug in the market. Actually
70/. were paid through the custom-house during the
last six months for imported almonds, while the home-grown article,
infinitely superior in quality, was absolutely unsaleable.
You see,
protection through the custom-house is not the
infallible recipe for "every ill that flesh is heir
to" that some "doctrinaire's" would have us suppose.
My old
entertainer had very decided opinions about the causes
of the prevailing depression and stagnation in the
island. When I deplored the lack of energy which I
noticed:—
"Bah," said
he, "there's plenty energy, but it's misdirected, sir!
Our young people will dance at a ball till two or
three in the morning, and play lawn tennis all day to
boot; but they are too ill and languid to get up to
breakfast, and would let their own mother wait on them
in bed. They will go to a picnic right up to the top
of Mount Wellington ; but they are too weak to go two miles to
church unless they go in a carriage. Our young
people are too well off, sir. Their parents made money
in the old times, and the young ones had no inducement
to work, when assigned prisoners could be got for 10/.
a year. So our young men grew up with no settled
industry, no application, and the country feels the
curse of indolence and want of enterprise now."
Such was the
dictum of my old friend. I make no comment on it. The
moral is obvious.
My friend
was enthusiastic in his advocacy of orchard farming as
against cereals. All his young trees are now on
blight-proof stocks. He has uprooted all his hedges and cultivates
right up to his boundary walls, and even trains trees
against them. He pointed out the property of a
neighbour thirty-four acres in extent, which a few years ago was
purchased for 300/. cash. During the first three years the buyer
got half his money back, and in two years they took
over fifty tons of strawberries from fifteen acres.
"Where is
the cereal that can equal that?" triumphantly queried
my host. Certes! Echo answers, "Where indeed?"
Another
product for which the island has become famous is its hops. Since its
first introduction in 1822 by Mr. W. Shoobridge, the industry
struggled on through many fluctuations, and in
1867 numbers of new growers erected kilns for curing
the hops at various places, and hop-growing became fairly settled as
one of the leading industries in the New Norfolk
district. The low prices in 1869—70 checked for a time
the progress of the industries, but now it seems
fairly established, and as time goes on, adding to the
experience of the growers, and their ability to turn
out a good article, there seems every reason to
predict a great future for Tasmania as a hop-growing
country. The leading kinds at present grown are the early white
grape,goldings(Canterbury).and lateorgreen grape,
and also a very early kind called the red golding.
In 1879 the
Agricultural returns give the following statistics: 587 acres; produce,
738,616 lbs.; value of hops exported, 26,512/.;
weight, 558,622 lbs.
After a very
pleasant day among the orchards we rejoined the
steamer, and sailed for Melbourne during the night.
Next morning
we had a beautiful view of the picturesque coast of
the goodly little island. Between- Hobart and Swan Island we
passed no less than three localities where coal
exists. Mines have, in all three places, been opened
and since abandoned. There is no doubt that in
minerals Tasmania is very rich. Like all the
Australian colonies, she only wants capital, and more
abundant labour, to become the theatre of busy and
remunerative industries. The quid-nuncs of the London
Stock Exchange smile and shrug their shoulders at the
mention of Australian investments. For the gambling
purposes of London jobbers, securities must be readily
negotiable; and Australian stocks and shares, though
offering three, and even four times, the rate of
interest obtainable on the floating media of Capel
Court, are of course not readily negotiable or
vendible, and so for the present they are neglected.
The time will come, however, nay, is on the approach
now, when capitalists and workers, both, will better
understand and more intelligently appreciate the
boundless resources of Australasia, and a new era of
enterprise and development will undoubtedly set in,
which will advance the cause of true Anglo-Saxon
federation more than all the fussy claptrap of
irresponsible theorists, who speak so much and really
do so little.
As an illustration of how really little is known of
Australia, even by those who might be imagined to know most; the
captain, as we were talking on this theme, pointed out to me the
Flinders Island which we pass between Hobart and Melbourne. This group
contains more land than all Samoa, about which so much fuss is being
made at present, and which has almost led to a grave imbroglio between
some of the European great powers. The Flinders are by all reports rich
in mineral wealth, and yet they are practically ignored, and their very
existence unknown to the great majority even of Victorians, who are so
enthusiastic (and I for one do not blame them,) about the conquest of
South Sea Islands, the annexation of New Guinea, and the opening up of
new markets for Victorian manufactures. The islands contain a population
of some sixty individuals, mostly half-castes, the result of the
intermarriage of runaway sailors with Tasmanian aborigines. Sheep and
cattle are reared by these islanders, but no attention is paid to
growing either wool or beef on a commercial scale. They make a living
which suffices for all their simple wants out of their flocks and herds,
and their diet is eked out with the eggs and oil of the mutton bird,
both of which they also export.
The bird
itself, after the oil is expressed, is smoked, and
forms one more antipodean paradox. It is familiarly
known as the Australian smoked herring, and yet it is
a bird. A toasted smoked mutton bird, both in smell,
taste, and colour, is scarcely distinguishable from a
smoked bloater. They are said to be very nourishing,
and invalids find them toothsome and appetizing.
Maria
Island, one of the group, has been leased to an
Italian for the purpose of trying to introduce silk culture.
Amid a succession of icy squalls we reached Hobson's Bay,
threaded our devious way up the unsavoury Yarra, and were pleased once more
to take up our quarters in that most homely and comfortable of
caravanserais, Menzie's Hotel, and so for the present we bid a reluctant
adieu to our New Zealand cousins. |