Page:While the Billy Boils, 1913.djvu/70

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HIS COUNTRY―AFTER ALL


The Blenheim coach was descending into the valley of the Avetere River―pronounced Aveterry―from the saddle of Taylor's Pass. Across the river to the right, the grey slopes and flats stretched away to the distant sea from a range of tussock hills. There was no native bush there; but there were several groves of imported timber standing wide apart―sentinel-like―seeming lonely and striking in their isolation.

'Grand country, New Zealand, eh?' said a stout man with a brown face, grey beard, and grey eyes, who sat between the driver and another passenger on the box.

'You don't call this grand country!' exclaimed the other passenger, who claimed to be, and looked like, a commercial traveller, and might have been a professional spieler―quite possibly both. 'Why, it's about the poorest country in New Zealand! You ought to see some of the country in the North Island―Wairarapa and Napier districts, round about Pahiatua. I call this damn poor country.'

'Well, I reckon you wouldn't, if you'd ever been in Australia―back in New South Wales. The people here don't seem to know what a grand country they've

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