Station Life in New Zealand
Station Life in New Zealand
Book Excerpt
liage 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 consequ
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