Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SIR GEORGE GREY AT KAWAU.

The Auckland correspondent of the Otago Daily Times writes as follows ;—For several years he has been leading the life of a hermit, so far as general society is concerned. His chief occupation has been the improvement of his beautiful, but by no means fertile, island, on which he has expended large sums of money. Kawau is about thirty.miles from Auckland, and 10,000 acres in extent. It was formerly well-known as the site of the operations of an English company, who erected smelting works and mined for copper on the island in the old New Zealand days. The smelting works are still there, and the copper ore abounds, but it is too poor to pay so far as yet discovered. Sir George Grey has paid no attention to it, but expends his ample income in importing rare trees and plants, and in putting the land into English grasses. The island is dotted over with laborers’ cottages, and is a favorite resort for pic-nic parties on great occasions. In a beautiful quiet little bay the owner has briilt his house, and hah therein collected what will form a very valuable addition to the Museum lucky enough hereafter to obtain them. Black letterbooks of the most rare character, and beautifully illuminated—an original Oaxton, of which the counterpart sold for £320 in London lately fine specimens of block printing in valuable old books, and a rare collection of manuscripts, form part of the library which Sir George Grey has gathered about him. Among the manuscripts are some considered very precious, and of great historical value. There is a secret treaty between Cromwell and the Hanseatic League and other Protestant powers, to uphold Protestantism in Europe in case of attack. This treaty has not, I believe, been ever published, and is doubly valuable because in the handwriting of John Milton. Among the signatures and seals are the name and seal of P. Lisle, the husband of the Lady Alice Lisle, beheaded in James the Fifth’s reign for befriending rebels. There are also draft despatches prepared for Cromwell's perusal, with the corrections to be made in them in his own handwriting. In one instance, complaining of the treatment of a foreign power as being “ barely civil,” old Oliver has dashed his pen through the milk-and-water phrase of his secretary, and substituted for it “ hardly borne.” In others he has, with a bold dash, erased whole paragraphs of compliment or useless verbiage. Then we have, a valuable collection of despatches to Thurloe, Cromwell’s Secretary of State, from Sir Philip Meadows. In one of these Meadows writes in the most artful strain to Thurloe. He tells the Secretary that he has just had a long interview with, I think, the King of Sweden ; that the King is grieved to hear of the attempts made on his Highness’s life, and of the troubles by which conspirators are surrounding him. Having gradually worked to the point, he quietly goes on to say that the King expressed his surprise that his Highness did not avail himself of the right to which he had so clear a claim, and shield himself from these base attacks by assuming the Crown of England, and the 'sacredness with which that Crown would surround him. Never was temptation more skillfully, more cunningly, put before any man than in the few lines of this secret despatch. The collection has been for many years Sir George's hobby, and no chance has been loot of making it more complete. On one occasion he heard of a sale of records and documents about to be made in Cologne, and sent an agent to that city, who succeeded in obtaining a fine collection of old seals attached to the documents with which German students and mechanics had thenvisits to various cities formally attested during their Wanderjahr. Add to all this, a rare collection of books, of paintings, and of engravings of various epochs and various masters, and you may form a fair idea of the mode in which Sir George Grey occupies the .leisure hours after actively superintending the work on his plantation and farm.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTIM18741116.2.15

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4261, 16 November 1874, Page 2

Word Count
690

SIR GEORGE GREY AT KAWAU. New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4261, 16 November 1874, Page 2

SIR GEORGE GREY AT KAWAU. New Zealand Times, Volume XXIX, Issue 4261, 16 November 1874, Page 2

Help

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