Prev | Current Page 152 | Next

Morris, Charles, 1833-1922

"The San Francisco calamity by earthquake and fire"


And it was a city of romance and a gateway to adventure. It opened out
on the mysterious Pacific, the untamed ocean, and most of China, Japan,
the South Sea Islands, Lower California, the west coast of Central
America, Australia that came to this country passed in through the
Golden Gate. There was a sprinkling, too, of Alaska and Siberia.
From his windows on Russian Hill one saw always something strange and
suggestive creeping through the mists of the bay. It would be a South
Sea Island brig, bringing in copra, to take out cottons and idols; a
Chinese junk with fan-like sails, back from an expedition after sharks'
livers; an old whaler, which seemed to drip oil, back from a year of
cruising in the Arctic. Even, the tramp windjammers were deep-chested
craft, capable of rounding the Horn or of circumnavigating the globe;
and they came in streaked and picturesque from their long voyaging.

A MIXTURE OF RACES.

In the orange colored dawn which always comes through the mists of that
bay, the fishing fleet would crawl in under triangular lateen sails, for
the fishermen of San Francisco Bay are all Neapolitans, who have brought
their costumes and sail with lateen rigs shaped like the ear of a horse
when the wind fills them and stained an orange brown.
The "smelting pot of the races" Stevenson called the region along the
water front, for here the people of all these craft met, Italians,
Greeks, Russians, Lascars, Kanakas, Alaska Indians, black Gilbert
Islanders, Spanish-Americans, wanderers and sailors from all the world,
who came in and out from among the queer craft to lose themselves in the
disreputable shanties and saloons.


Pages:
140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164
Fundacja Hobbit Fundacja Sloneczko Dzieci Niczyje Nasze Dzieci Podaruj Zycie