Page:Travel letters from New Zealand, Australia and Africa (1913).djvu/93

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

company, and we gave them what we pleased. I drank tea four times today: at breakfast, at noon, in the afternoon, and at dinner at 7 o'clock. . . . Wherever there was a house, the people came out to see the stage go by. At two or three places we saw pigs of the Arkansas razor-back variety; there is no corn here, and pigs do not amount to much. The passengers were all New-Zealanders, and they told us they knew we were from the United States as soon as they saw us. They said they could always tell English and Americans. And then we told them we knew they were New-Zealanders, and not English, because we had heard them abusing the English. When you see a man who is exactly like an Englishman, but who abuses the English, you may know he is from New Zealand or Australia. A woman and her daughter who were passengers told us New-Zealanders always admired Americans; particularly American women. All the passengers, except the Maoris, were making about the same trip we were making, and we had met several of them at different places, and become acquainted. In traveling, it is almost allowable to speak to anyone. . . . At 7 o'clock in the evening we reached the railroad at Waiora, and waited an hour and twenty minutes for a train to Taumarunui. This is the only night train operated in New Zealand, and connects its two most important cities: Wellington and Auckland. . . . It is a universal custom at hotels here, when a servant serves you, to say "Thank you." A waiter will hand you a bill of fare, and you indicate that you will take soup, whereupon the waiter says "Thank you." When the waiter brings the soup, you say "Thank you."