The early
years were very busy ones indeed for the L.R.C. and it is interesting
to get a further glimpse of what things were like from the impressions
of Rudyard Kipling. He visited Hongkong, and in "From Sea
to Sea and Other Sketches", written 1887-9, has the following:
"Once,
before I got away, I climbed to the civil station of Hongkong
which overlooks the town. There in sumptuous stone villas
built on the edge of the cliff and facing shaded roads, in
a wilderness of beautiful flowers and a hushed calm unvexed
even by the roar of the traffic below, the residents do their
best to imitate the life of an Indian up-country station.
They are better off than we are. At the bandstand the ladies
dress all in one piece - shoes, gloves and umbrellas come
out from England with the dress, and every memsahib knows
what that means - but the mechanism of their lives is much
the same.
In one point
they are superior. The ladies have a club of their very own
to which, I believe, men are only allowed to come on sufferance.
At a dance there are about 20 men to one lady, and there are
practically no spinsters in the island. The inhabitants complain
of being cooped in and shut up. They look at the sea below
them and long to get away."
Has Hongkong
changed so very much? At any rate, seventy years later there
is still the roar of traffic - and the L.R.C.
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