NEW ZEALAND GIRLS.
—I — •-. AUSTRALIAN CRITICISM. "MINCING AFFECTION." SYDNEY, June 25. A criticism of Australian girls, which, appeared in a New Zealand paper recently, lias teen reprinted m Sydney and has brought foTthi many indignant letters. It was, on the authority of a Christchurch lady, asserted in the paper in which the criticism originally appeared, that the young ladies in offices in New Zealand "are more diligent, more attentive, more careful, less frivolous, and more anxious to give satisfaction than Australian girls, who, as a rule, do not show, any inclination for office woirk— indeed for any vocation which demands application and entails drudgery. Besides that, the Australian girl has developed a decided twang which amounts almost to a misuse of English." "Most of the girls in Sydney offices," says one correspondent who takes up the cudgels for the Australians, "nave matriculated, can make their own clothes and do their own millinery. In addition to possessing these estimable qualities, they are extremely original and resourceful, and] thoroughly domesticated, and there-1 fore make companionable wives and j good mothers." He refers to the' Christchurch manner of speaking, and ■ says they speak with a mincing affee- j tation which is most distressing, and amounts to a distinct "lingo/ , j A business man who has just re-j turned to Sydney from New Zealand, j after spending the last ten years j there, is as much a champion for the j Australian girl as the Christchurch j lady is for the New Zealand girl. "It is quite impossible," he said, "for the New Zealand girl, for the simple reason that she has no means of acquiring the experience. New Zealanders are very nice to you when you are on a visit there, but it is a different matter when you stay there for good. As for New Zealand girls, I can tell you I was glad to come away. They do nothing but talk about each other all the time. They pick out^ everyone's bad qualities, and embroider1 on them at length. God help any girl who goes astray, because they never forget her, and they'll never let anyone else either."
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19130704.2.27
Bibliographic details
Marlborough Express, Volume XLVII, Issue 156, 4 July 1913, Page 5
Word Count
357NEW ZEALAND GIRLS. Marlborough Express, Volume XLVII, Issue 156, 4 July 1913, Page 5
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