The Greenstone Door

William Satchell (1861 - 1942)

The Greenstone Door is a historical novel, set between 1830-1860’s New Zealand. The main character, Cedric Tregarthen, is remembering his past, telling the story both from his vantage point as an old man remembering, and as a young man experiencing his life. The story starts with the sack of the Te Kuma pa and the death of his father, his subsequent adoption by the trader Purcell and protection of Te Waharoa. He grows up among the Maori people, with his foster sister Puhi-Huia and his friend, Rangiora. Together the three young people penetrate to a secret limestone cave, where in their fancy the stalagmites take the shapes of men and women in some drama of the future; Rangiora and Cedric end the racial hostility of their boyhood with an oath of peace, the compact of the Tatau Pounamu, that the Greenstone Door be closed. Events then move on in history, through the troubles that followed Waitangi. We see Cedric in Auckland, meeting his love interest and observing Governor George Grey at close range. When the Waikato war breaks out, his sympathies and loyalties are divided and, in theory, we are shown both sides. (http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-SteNove-t1-body-d2-d8.html)

It is worth remembering that this book was published in 1914 and holds value as an artifact of the Pakeha(1) desire to justify their place in New Zealand and to mythologize the wars for New Zealand. In reality the conflict was ‘brutal, bloody and calculated’ (RNZ). The invasion of the Waikato between 1863 and 1864 is the biggest campaign of the New Zealand wars and marks a titanic struggle as to who will own and control New Zealand itself, conflict between Maori defending what was rightfully theirs and the imperial might of Great Britain. The outcome of the war was the confiscation of 12,000 square km2 of Waikato lands. The repercussions of this have reverberated throughout New Zealand history and “leaves the King Movement tribes with a legacy of poverty and bitterness that was partly assuaged in 1995 when the government conceded that the 1863 invasion and confiscation was wrongful and apologised for its actions”. The Waikato-Tainui tribe accepted compensation in the form of cash and some government-controlled lands totalling about $171 million – about 1 percent of the value of the lands confiscated in 1863. Queen Elizabeth II personally signed the Waikato Raupatu Claims Settlement Act 1995. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasion_of_the_Waikato).

Also, real atrocities were committed in one of the battles depicted in 'The Greenstone Door' at Rangiaowhia, quite apart from the bloodiness of warfare. This was a negotiated 'safe harbour' for non-combatants and people came to Rangiaowhia seeking refuge. The army attacked and killed unarmed men, women and children, both by gunfire and torching a building that they were sheltering in. 'The Greenstone Door' alludes to this torched building but never acknowledges that it was likely a church and housed women and children. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rangiaowhia)

So enjoy this story, as you will, keeping in mind that it is fiction and offers a highly biased Pakeha view of the reasons for and justification of war.

For anyone wanting to know more about this history, I recommend Dr Vincent O’Malley’s book ‘The Great War for New Zealand: Waikato 1800-2000’. RNZ also have an excellent program on this subject entitled ‘NZ Wars: Stories of Tainui’ available on YouTube.

1. Pakeha – White New Zealander – usually of British extraction.

Genre(s): Action & Adventure, Historical

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 00 Preface Gnomesb
00:01:26
Play 01 I am Lost and Found Gnomesb
00:27:16
Play 02 I am Claimed in Utu and Become the Little Finger of Te Waharoa Gnomesb
00:27:38
Play 03 I Find A Haven Gnomesb
00:39:25
Play 04 I Meet Rangiora Gnomesb
00:34:35
Play 05 Cave and River Gnomesb
00:32:35
Play 06 I Visit the Pa of the Cannibal Chef Gnomesb
00:29:32
Play 07 The War of Light and Darkness Gnomesb
00:34:31
Play 08 The Triumph of Love - and of Darkness Gnomesb
00:32:51
Play 09 I am Set at Liberty Gnomesb
00:26:23
Play 10 I Make Acquaintance with a Horse and a White Girl Gnomesb
00:33:09
Play 11 I Enter the White Men's City Gnomesb
00:38:35
Play 12 I Learn my Origin Gnomesb
00:34:30
Play 13 The Past Repeats Itself Gnomesb
00:31:16
Play 14 Three Years Gnomesb
00:44:34
Play 15 Parted Gnomesb
00:22:05
Play 16 I Fight a Battle Gnomesb
00:30:01
Play 17 I Return Home Gnomesb
00:38:26
Play 18 The Path of True Love Gnomesb
00:28:04
Play 19 Letters from Home Gnomesb
00:27:34
Play 20 The Storm-Cloud Gnomesb
00:34:02
Play 21 I Leave Auckland and Fall into an Ambush Gnomesb
00:41:05
Play 22 Prisoner - Part one Gnomesb
00:24:26
Play 23 Prisoner - Part two Gnomesb
00:42:46
Play 24 I Reach the End of my Captivity Gnomesb
00:32:16
Play 25 The Last Stand Gnomesb
00:45:31
Play 26 A Black Dawn Gnomesb
00:35:48
Play 27 The Greenstone Door Gnomesb
00:17:03
Play 28 Glossary Gnomesb
00:04:58
Play 29 Notes Gnomesb
00:03:26