FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   >>  
All this leads us to the highest hopes for the future. What we need most of all is a centralization of mechanical industries around the shores of this bay. Let everything that is made be made here, and the requirements of all the peoples facing this ocean here be met. The Panama canal will be a blessing or a curse to California in proportion as she rises to the occasion and makes opportunities. Manufactures and commerce tell the whole story. Let us have the city beautiful by all means--it will pay; Paris makes it pay; but we must have the useful in any event--this, and a municipality with its several parts subordinated to a general scheme. What we can do without is demagogism, with its attendant labor wrangles, and all the fraud, lying, and hypocrisy incident to a too free government. We want a city superior to any other in beauty, as well as in utility, and it will pay these United States well to see that we have it. If we build no better than before, we gain nothing by this fire which has cost many a heartache. The game of the gods is in our hands; shall we play it worthily? Two decades of inaction at this juncture, like those which followed the advent of the overland railway, would decide the fate of the city adversely for the century, and the effect of it would last for ten centuries. When the shores of the Pacific are occupied as the shores of the Atlantic now are, when all around the vast arena formed by America, Asia, and Australia are great nations of wealth and culture, with hundreds of Bostons and Baltimores, of Londons and Liverpools, the great American republic would scarcely be satisfied with only a porter's lodge at her western gateway. It is not much to say that the new city will be modern and up to date, with some widened streets and winding boulevards, gardens banging to the hillside, parks with lakes and cascades, reservoirs of sea water on every hilltop; public work and public service, street cars telephones and lighting being of the best. Plans for such changes were prepared before the fire; they can be extended and carried out with greater facility since the ground has been cleared from obstructions. All this and more may easily be done if the government can be made to see where the true interests of the people lie, to regard a west-coast metropolis with an eye for something of beauty as well as of utility, an eye which can see utility in beauty, and withal an eye of pride in possession. A paltr
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   >>  



Top keywords:

beauty

 

utility

 

shores

 

public

 

government

 

western

 

gateway

 

possession

 

modern

 
widened

streets
 

winding

 

metropolis

 
withal
 

Australia

 

nations

 
wealth
 

America

 
formed
 

culture


hundreds
 

scarcely

 

republic

 

satisfied

 

porter

 

American

 

Bostons

 

Baltimores

 

Londons

 

Liverpools


gardens

 

extended

 

carried

 
interests
 

people

 

prepared

 

greater

 
obstructions
 

easily

 
cleared

facility
 
ground
 

reservoirs

 

cascades

 

banging

 

hillside

 

hilltop

 

Atlantic

 
regard
 

lighting