The Chinese New Year: the celebration of Garibaldi

A GRAPHIC DESCRIPTION
(By Our Gladstone Correspondent.)

From the Mercury, 1 March 1912

The day had been hot, tiring and enervating. Little gusts of wind had played with the quietly sleeping dust along the sandy roads, and the dust, resenting such treatment, had wrathfully risen in whirling clouds and vented its wrath on our poor unfortunate selves–but it is all over now; the sun has sunk below the distant ranges, the gusts of wind have followed, and the half-moon of night looks down upon a quiet, still world about us.

We leave Pioneer about 8 o’clock, and follow a fair bush road out towards the old Garibaldi mine, some three or four miles distant, for this is the Chinatown of the district. The tall gum trees throw their long shadows across our path, and make it a seemingly corduroy track. Not a leaf is stirring. Not a sound is heard. It seems as if night were once more mourning the death of another day, and a peculiar loneliness steals over us as only an Australian bushman can know. Two miles more, and we emerge from the forest into a few acres of cleared ground. How changed is the scene! Thirty houses–more like sheds with full dome roofs–stand on both sides of a long narrow street. Each house has the same architecture, or the want of it. Each is built close against its neighbour as if appealing for protections. There are no fences, no gardens, no comfortable look about any. One or two seem to hide away behind poles which may be embryo verandahs. Inside the rooms are small, and crowded with all sorts of things, useful and otherwise. Celestials in European clothes are popping in and out, and if bland smiles are evidence of happy, good nature, these citizens of Chinatown are full of it. Every house sports its Chinese lantern and red paper with Chinese hieroglyphics printed thereon. Fruit, sweets, soups, and all manner of refreshments are given liberally to visitors, and the whole place is a hum of activity.

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