On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (3)
-
180 THE LAST NEWS OF THE EMIGRANTS.
-
XXVIIL—THE LAST NEWS OF THE EMIGRANTS. 9...
-
Ous [Readers are aware that news of Miss...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
—?- — The Educated World Seems To Be Div...
of wretchedness , on wages that barely sufficed to keep body and soul togetherThusthose who are interested In the Temperance
cause and the . home , -comfort of the poor , ought to look with a friendlon the Movement for the Employment . of "Women .
y eye The more the subject is studied , the more clearly it will be perceived that the two movements are kindred ones , and that both are
_working together for the same great object—the improvement of _che working classes , especially the condition of the female portion .
J . B .
180 The Last News Of The Emigrants.
180 THE LAST NEWS OF THE _EMIGRANTS .
Xxviil—The Last News Of The Emigrants. 9...
XXVIIL—THE LAST NEWS OF THE _EMIGRANTS . 9 A
Ous [Readers Are Aware That News Of Miss...
_Ous [ Readers are aware that news of Miss Eye ' s safe arrival at Otago was received in the middle of last month .
privat one 33 y which e the letters kindness appeared from of her in friends , the whi we Times ch are came ; able which by to the g we ive same also extracts mail reprint of as some , the for
the sake of completing the first records of this remarkable mission to the Colonies . In going out herself to see what can be done and
what ought to be done in helping out female emigrants , Miss Eye has shown how well she understands the first requisite of good _dorf
work—If you _zvant a thing done , do it yourself ; if you t—send I The Saxon ith and irony of the last -word of this proverb have
been illustrated p in many former attempts to promote emigration with due regard to the health and morals of the emigrants .
Kindhearted people have " sent , " and the result has been very questionableand that which they wanted has been but partially done .
Like , Mrs . Chisholm in former years , Miss Kye has set to work in the one effectual prayers and good wishes accompanied the
John Duncanwhen way she ; sailed from Gravesend and traversed half -fche globe to _^ our antipodes ; and the blessing of God went with
the ship , since , in spite of dangers , our dear friend is safe , and can thus tell her own story : — Dunedin Monday , Otago February , 16 th 1868 .
, , My deab X am , sure will be lad to hear of our safe arrivalat this most days beautiful sihted country land , after you earl a on safe Tuesday g and glorious lastbut passage did not of reach seventy , this -eig till ht
. We g y , gration Saturday officers mid-day at , Port being Chalmers ' detained for at the some bar few by days weather I , by health that and by emi this
time and of you the hav sudden e learned , influx in of Eng numbers land of from the discovery Melbourne of . new one presume thousan gold fields d reached here , ;
this port two days before our arrival , and a second one thousand the same day consternation . They reached stood Dunedin four abreast a few to hour receive s earlier us on than the ourselves jetty . , As and , a to bod our y ,
they are a remarkabl , y fine set of men , and judging from their open manly
-
-
Citation
-
English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), May 1, 1863, page 180, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01051863/page/36/
-