Page image
English
till I saw Norris. He said he would produce your letter, and shew that I had offered myself at £200.I told him I had written asking you for £300, and my charge was a guinea for occasional work. He intimated that I was taking advantage of the Government; and if I did not accept his offer, it was probable the Government would not employ me at all. That he would recommend me to you for £300 as Sub-Land Commissioner for Taranaki, if I gave way to him, etc., etc., But I adhered to what I had said at first. You will, I have no doubt, receive a letter from him to my prejudice, but I am not afraid of that, I have worked for you for some time. You know all I can do, and what I cannot do; and I have never worked for the Superintendent or C. Brown; and he knows not whether I am worth anything or nothing. Yesterday he called at Halse's with your letter, and made an apology to me in so far as became his dignity as such. I read that part of your letter which referred to me, and which corresponds exactly with what I said to him. He little knows that you showed me that part of it when we were at Mokau. He pressed me to accept his terms again; but I asked him to allow me to leave it for the present, because I was under offer to you. Mr. Cooper has agreed to give me a guinea a day when I am actually employed on the sueveys; and rainy weather, Norris work comes in. I have been surveying four days on this land, and Cooper has expressed himself well pleased with what I have done. I remain with the natives, and go to work as the natives, say at dark in the morning. I shall leave the subject of the Hua Block for Cooper to write on; but I think as far as I can learn from the natives, Cooper's management of this place, Te Hua, notwithstanding what the people say, will win him laurels, and will satisfy you, --- that is, if the present arrangement is adhered to by the natives. They consent to give up to Cooke, some of the most desirable land in the purchase; and a fortnight or so, will settle the question. With respect to Mokau, I am keeping up correspondence with the people, and will continue to do so; except I hear from you to the contrary. Should you not think me worth the sum I ask, I shall be most happy to give any person you may send to Mokau, every information to the best of my ability; or I will go to Mokau for you for a month or two next summer, without any remuneration, as I feel confident of my success there. I am doing well in Taranaki; but your work I like better than any other employment, as I am fond of ranging about, and it agrees with my health; and I should not be at all afraid to attack a more difficult question than Mokau, if I had twelve months practice there. I sincerely trust you will not take amiss my views in this matter, as I think I may without prejudice to myself, ask a sum which, at least in my opinion, I consider I am worth. I should, of course, keep a horse, which would be at the

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert