AS OTHERS SEE US.
A Chicagoan, says an American contemporary, who has recently returned from Australia and New Zealand, says of the latter country : —“ New Zealand is a wonderland. As you sail towards it there rises before you a black, and an all appearance unbroken wall of stone. It is a volcanic island, and the coast is very rough and dangerous. Tet Auckland has the most beautiful harbour my eyes ever rested upon. The vegetation is very strange and beautiful., I have seen fern trees twenty and twenty-five feet high, with magnificent fronds. The fern growth is marvellously.luxuriant. ..There seems to be no bottom to the soil, either of the island or the continent. I have seen soil, black .muck soil—twenty feet deep, and they have told me that up the country were many immense (towns where twenty-five feet was the average. It is impossible to over calculate the productive capacity of such ground as that. The great drawback to agriculture is the recurrence of a yearly drought. They are beginning to overcome this by means of artesian wells and the diversion of water-courses. It is a strange and in some respects a weird land. The gum trees give a queer and creepy aspect to every wood scene. Their limbs are gnarled and twisted in a way you cannot dissociate from an idea of pain; foliage is scant, and the white bark stares through it like bare arms. The birds are nearly all songless though they have the most brilliant plumage. Most of them are quiet all day, but as soon as night falls the woods are ringing with their harsh, discordant cries. In fact, the continent is in many respects what you might call a looking.glass country—for everything seems to be reversed in it. The north is warm the south is cold; day is quiet and night is full of life; the vegetation smallest here is largest there, and they have a bird without wings and fourfooted animals with beaks. But the humans are right eud up and wide-awake and unless I’m much mistaken they will make a country of it that the world will sbmd amazed ai.” The foregoing seems rather mixed. The writer has evidently travelled in both Australia and New Zealand, and has copfused the distinctive features of both in a manner highly suggestive of an overdose of “ gin-sling.”
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Bibliographic details
Western Star, Issue 281, 25 January 1879, Page 6
Word Count
393AS OTHERS SEE US. Western Star, Issue 281, 25 January 1879, Page 6
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