Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER II. The market price of a Pakeha.The value of a Pakeha ' as such.'Maori hospitality in the good old times.A respectable friend.Maori mermaids.My notions of the value of gold.How I got on shore. Here I must remark that in those days the value of a pakeha to a tribe was enormous. For want of pakehas to trade with, and from whom to procure gunpowder and muskets, many tribes or sections of tribes were about this time exterminated, or nearly so, by their more fortunate neighbours who got pakehas before them, and who consequently became armed with muskets first. A pakeha trader was therefore of a value, say, about twenty times his own weight in muskets. This, according to my notes made at the time, I find to have represented a value in New Zealand something about what we mean in England when we talk of the sum total of the national debt. A book-keeper, or a second-ratepakeha, not a trader, might be valued at, say, his weight in tomahawksan enormous sum also. The poorest labouring pakeha, though he might have no property, would earn somethinghis value to the chief and tribe with whom he lived might be estimated at, say, his weight in fishhooks, or about a hundred thousand pounds or sovalue estimated by eagerness to obtain the article. The value of a musket was not to be estimated to a native by just what he gave for it. He gave all he had, or could procure; and had he ten times as much to give he would have given it, if necessary; or if not, he would buy ten muskets instead of one. Muskets, muskets, muskets! nothing but muskets! was the first demand of the Maorimuskets and gunpowder at any cost. I do not, however, mean to affirm that pakehas were at this time valued ' as such'like Mr. Pickwick's silk stockings, which were very good and valuable stockings '...