Station Life in New Zealand
Letter II. Sight-Seeing in Melbourne
Letter II. Sight-Seeing in Melbourne.
Melbourne,
October 1st, 1865.
I have left my letter to the last moment before starting for Lyttleton; everything is re-packed and ready, and we sail to-morrow morning in the Albion. She is a mail-steamer—very small after our large vessel, but she looks clean and tidy; at all events, we hope to be only on board her for ten days. In England one fancies that New Zealand is quite close to Australia, so I was rather disgusted to find we had another thousand miles of steaming to do before we could reach our new home; and one of the many Job’s comforters who are scattered up and down the world assures me that the navigation is the most dangerous and difficult of the whole voyage.
We have seen a good deal of Melbourne this week; and not only of the
town, for we have had many drives in the exceedingly pretty suburbs,
owing to the kindness of the D——s, who have been most hospitable
and made our visit here delightful. We drove out to their house at
Toorak three or four times; and spent a
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long afternoon with them;
and there I began to make acquaintance with the Antipodean trees and
flowers. I hope you will not think it a very sweeping assertion if
I say that all the leaves look as if they were made of leather, but
it really is so; the hot winds appear to parch up everything, at all
events. round Melbourne, till the greatest charm of foliage is more
or less lost; the flowers also look withered and burnt up, as yours
do at the end of a long, dry summer, only they assume this
appearance after the first hot wind in spring. The suburb called
Heidelberg is the prettiest, to my taste—an undulating country with
vineyards, and a park-like appearance which, is very charming. All
round Melbourne there are nice, comfortable, English-looking villas.
At one of these we called to return a visit and found a very
handsome house, luxuriously furnished, with beautiful garden and
grounds. One afternoon we went by rail to St. Kilda’s, a
flourishing bathing-place on the sea-coast, about six miles from
Melbourne. Everywhere building is going on with great rapidity, and
you do not see any poor people in the streets. If I wanted to be
critical and find fault, I might object to the deep gutters on each
side of the road; after a shower of rain they are raging torrents
for a short time, through which you are obliged to splash without
regard to the muddy consequences; and even when they are dry, they
entail sudden and prodigious jolts. There are plenty of Hansoms and
all sorts of other conveyances, but I gave
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F—— no peace until he
took me for a drive in a vehicle which was quite new to me—a sort
of light car with a canopy and curtains, holding four, two on each
seat, dos-à-dos, and called a “jingle,”—of American parentage, I
fancy. One drive in this carriage was quite enough, however, and I
contented myself with Hansoms afterwards; but walking is really more
enjoyable than anything else, after having been so long cooped up on
board ship.
We admired the fine statue, at the top of Collins Street, to the
memory of the two most famous of Australian explorers, Burke and
Wills, and made many visits to the Museum, and the glorious Free
Library; we also went all over the Houses of Legislature—very new
and grand. But you must not despise me if I confess to having
enjoyed the shops exceedingly: it was so unlike a jeweller’s shop in
England to see on the counter gold in its raw state, in nuggets and
dust and flakes; in this stage of its existence it certainly
deserves its name of “filthy lucre,“ for it is often only half
washed. There were quantities of emus’ eggs in the silversmiths’
shops, mounted in every conceivable way as cups and vases, and even
as work-boxes: some designs consisted of three or five eggs grouped
together as a centre-piece. I cannot honestly say I admired any of
them; they were generally too elaborate, comprising often a native
(spear in hand), a kangaroo, palms, ferns, cockatoos, and sometimes
an emu or two in addition, as a pedestal—all this in frosted silver
or gold. I was given a pair of these eggs before leaving England:
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they were mounted in London as little flower-vases in a setting
consisting only of a few bulrushes and leaves, yet far better than
any of these florid designs; but he emu-eggs are very popular in
Sydney or Melbourne, and I am told sell rapidly to people going
home, who take them as a memento of their Australian life, and
probably think that the greater the number of reminiscences
suggested by the ornament the more satisfactory it is as a purchase.
I must finish my letter by a description of a dinner-party which
about a dozen of our fellow-passengers joined with us in giving our
dear old captain before we all separated. Whilst we were on board,
it very often happened that the food was not very choice or good: at
all events we used sometimes to grumble at it, and we generally
wound up our lamentations by agreeing that when we reached Melbourne
we would have a good dinner together. Looking back on it, I must
say I think we were all rather greedy, but we tried to give a better
colouring to our gourmandism by inviting the captain, who was
universally popular, and by making it as elegant and pretty a repast
as possible. Three or four of the gentlemen formed themselves into
a committee, and they must really have worked very hard; at all
events they collected everything rare and strange in the way of
fish, flesh, and fowl peculiar to Australia, the arrangement of the
table was charming, and the delicacies were all cooked and served to
perfection. The ladies’ tastes were considered in the profusion of
flowers, and we each found an exquisite
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bouquet by our plate. I
cannot possibly give you a minute account of the whole ménu; in
fact, as it is, I feel rather like Froissart, who, after chronicling
a long list of sumptuous dishes, is not ashamed to confess, “Of all
which good things I, the chronicler of this narration, did partake!”
The soups comprised kangaroo-tail—a clear soup not unlike ox-tail,
but with a flavour of game. I wish I could recollect the names of
the fish: the fresh-water ones came a long distance by rail from the
river Murray, but were excellent nevertheless. The last thing which
I can remember tasting (for one really could do little else) was a
most exquisite morsel of pigeon—more like a quail than anything
else in flavour. I am not a judge of wine, as you may imagine,
therefore it is no unkindness to the owners of the beautiful
vineyards which we saw the other day, to say that I do not like the
Australian wines. Some of the gentlemen pronounced them to be
excellent, especially the equivalent to Sauterne, which has a
wonderful native name impossible to write down; but, as I said
before, I do not like the rather rough flavour. We had not a great
variety of fruit at dessert: indeed, Sydney oranges constituted its
main feature, as it is too late for winter fruits, and too early for
summer ones: but we were not inclined. to be over-fastidious, and
thought everything delicious.

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