A Woman's Impression of the Philippines by Mary Helen Fee
page 8 of 244 (03%)
page 8 of 244 (03%)
|
past Alcatraz Island and heard the army bugles blowing there. The
irregular outline of the city with its sky-scrapers printed itself against a background of dazzling blue, with here and there a tufty cloud. The day was symbolic of the spirit which sent young America across the Pacific--hope, brilliant hope, with just a cloud of doubt. We passed the Golden Gate just as our own luncheon gong sounded, and the _Buford_ was rolling to the heave of the outside sea as we sat down to our meal. At our own particular table we were eight--eight nice old (and young) maid schoolteachers. Some of us were plump and some were wofully thin. One was built on heroic lines of bone, and those sinners from Radcliffe were pretty. Toward the end of luncheon the _Buford_ began to roll and pitch and otherwise behave herself "most unbecoming," and my room-mate, declining to finish her luncheon, fled to the deck, where the air was fresher. Feeling no qualms myself, and secretly triumphing in her disillusion, I followed with her golf cape and rug, of which she had been too engrossed to think. My San Francisco acquaintance coming to my assistance, we established her in a steamer chair and sat down, one on each side, to cheer her up,--and badly she needed it, for her courage was fast deserting her. The sea was running heavily, and the wind was cold; I had not thought there could be such cold in July. The distance was obscured by a silvery haze which was not thick enough to be called a fog, but which lent a wintry aspect to sea and sky--a likeness increased by the miniature snow-field on each side of the bow as the water flung up and melted away in pools like bluish-white snow ice. |
|