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THE SERVANT GIRL QUESTION.

The following amusing sketch is extracted from the Queenslander: —The expectations of the young ladies who, under thedesignatiou of domestic servants, arrive in these colonies from Great Britian, have ever been sufficiently expansive. They have learnt, before condescending to take ship for oar shores, that at the antipodes all things go by contraries. • Fifteen shillings a week, Irish may apply, every Sunday out, followers allowed, a horse kept for their use, and a mistress to wait upon them, are a few of the reasonable conditions which they understand to be here included among their rights. They arrive in high good humour, prepared to allow their employers every fair indulgence. Children in the household will not be a bar to engagements ; no objection will be made to polishing the master's boots with black lead on such occasions as stove-cleaning may be going on. All reasonable attention paid to the roasting of the joint, but no responsibility incurred. Company allowed at reasonable intervals, provided they are good for vails. But it is to be feared that this pleasant understanding canuot last much longer. A young man in New Zealand, who deserves to be sacrificed on the outraged altar of domesticity, has raised a flame which it will take years to extinguish. This scourge of housekeepers, impelled by Satan, passed in review the inmates of the local immigrant's home, and, seeking from the matron an introduction to the prettiest of its temporary inmates, offered her an engagement which employers of the opposite sex can never compete with. His offer consisted ot a plain gold ring, a permanency, and his young affections. The thing will spread. Immigration agents will work the incident up into pamphlets. It will be most effective at their end of the voyage all the comely girls will argue with themselves that it might just as easily have been their case. And it may. An epidemic of marrying out of the Depot may set ou, now that the ice has been broken. Immigrant maidens in high ship-fed condition, will turn up the nose of scorn at anxious housekeepers desirous of being favoured with their assistance in the humbler minutiae of domestic life. Evety one of them who considers herself to have the slightest claim to personal attractions —that is to say every one of them without exception—will prefer to wait for the regulation young man to turn up, and invite them to drive off in state in his buggy to the nearest parson on the way to a well stocked and snug farm. There is every reason to fear that the regulation young man will ' t be there. Mau is distinctly au imitative animal. There is but one consolation, and that a poor one. Immigrants are pouriug in very fast. The supply of young men may run short, and the plainer young women be left unsatisfied. Then our wives will cheerfully secure for our households a supply of patent safety gorgons.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LWM18741110.2.15

Bibliographic details

Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 879, 10 November 1874, Page 3

Word Count
494

THE SERVANT GIRL QUESTION. Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 879, 10 November 1874, Page 3

THE SERVANT GIRL QUESTION. Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 879, 10 November 1874, Page 3

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