The City That Was; a requiem of old San Francisco by Will (William Henry) Irwin
page 20 of 20 (100%)
page 20 of 20 (100%)
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babies from falling. The effect was picturesque, and this hill was the
delight of painters. It was all more like Italy than anything in the Italian quarter of New York and Chicago - the very climate and surroundings, the wine country close at hand, the bay for their lateen boats, helped them. Over by the ocean and surrounded by cemeteries in which there are no more burials, there is an eminence which is topped by two peaks and which the Spanish of the early days named after the breasts of a woman. The unpoetic Americans had renamed it Twin Peaks. At its foot was Mission Dolores, the last mission planted by the Spanish padres in their march up the coast, and from these hills the Spanish looked for the first time upon the golden bay. Many years ago some one set up at the summit of this peak a sixty foot cross of timber. Once a high wind blew it down, and the women of the Fair family then had it restored so firmly that it would resist anything. It has risen for fifty years above the gay, careless, luxuriant and lovable city, in full view from every eminence and from every valley. It stands tonight, above the desolation of ruins. The bonny, merry city - the good, gray city - O that one who has mingled the wine of her bounding life with the wine of his youth should live to write the obituary of Old San Francisco! |
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