Our Italy - Charles Dudley Warner

Our Italy

SANTA BARBARA.
NEW YORK HARPER & BROTHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE Copyright, 1891, by Harper & Brothers. All rights reserved.

The traveller who descends into Italy by an Alpine pass never forgets the surprise and delight of the transition. In an hour he is whirled down the slopes from the region of eternal snow to the verdure of spring or the ripeness of summer. Suddenly—it may be at a turn in the road—winter is left behind; the plains of Lombardy are in view; the Lake of Como or Maggiore gleams below; there is a tree; there is an orchard; there is a garden; there is a villa overrun with vines; the singing of birds is heard; the air is gracious; the slopes are terraced, and covered with vineyards; great sheets of silver sheen in the landscape mark the growth of the olive; the dark green orchards of oranges and lemons are starred with gold; the lusty fig, always a temptation as of old, leans invitingly over the stone wall; everywhere are bloom and color under the blue sky; there are shrines by the way-side, chapels on the hill; one hears the melodious bells, the call of the vine-dressers, the laughter of girls.
The contrast is as great from the Indians of the Mojave Desert, two types of which are here given, to the vine-dressers of the Santa Ana Valley.
Italy is the land of the imagination, but the sensation on first beholding it from the northern heights, aside from its associations of romance and poetry, can be repeated in our own land by whoever will cross the burning desert of Colorado, or the savage wastes of the Mojave wilderness of stone and sage-brush, and come suddenly, as he must come by train, into the bloom of Southern California. Let us study a little the physical conditions.
The bay of San Diego is about three hundred miles east of San Francisco. The coast line runs south-east, but at Point Conception it turns sharply east, and then curves south-easterly about two hundred and fifty miles to the Mexican coast boundary, the extreme south-west limits of the United States, a few miles below San Diego. This coast, defined by these two limits, has a southern exposure on the sunniest of oceans. Off this coast, south of Point Conception, lies a chain of islands, curving in position in conformity with the shore, at a distance of twenty to seventy miles from the main-land. These islands are San Miguel, Santa Rosa, Santa Cruz, Anacapa, Santa Barbara, San Nicolas, Santa Catalina, San Clemente, and Los Coronados, which lie in Mexican waters. Between this chain of islands and the main-land is Santa Barbara Channel, flowing northward. The great ocean current from the north flows past Point Conception like a mill-race, and makes a suction, or a sort of eddy. It approaches nearer the coast in Lower California, where the return current, which is much warmer, flows northward and westward along the curving shore. The Santa Barbara Channel, which may be called an arm of the Pacific, flows by many a bold point and lovely bay, like those of San Pedro, Redondo, and Santa Monica; but it has no secure harbor, except the magnificent and unique bay of San Diego.

Charles Dudley Warner
Содержание

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CONTENTS.


ILLUSTRATIONS.


OUR ITALY.


CHAPTER I.


HOW OUR ITALY IS MADE.


CHAPTER II.


OUR CLIMATIC AND COMMERCIAL MEDITERRANEAN.


CHAPTER III.


EARLY VICISSITUDES.—PRODUCTIONS.—SANITARY CLIMATE.


CHAPTER IV.


THE WINTER OF OUR CONTENT.


CHAPTER V.


HEALTH AND LONGEVITY.


CHAPTER VI.


IS RESIDENCE HERE AGREEABLE?


CHAPTER VII.


THE WINTER ON THE COAST.


CHAPTER VIII.


THE GENERAL OUTLOOK.—LAND AND PRICES.


CHAPTER IX.


THE ADVANTAGES OF IRRIGATION.


CHAPTER X.


THE CHANCE FOR LABORERS AND SMALL FARMERS.


CHAPTER XI.


SOME DETAILS OF THE WONDERFUL DEVELOPMENT.


CHAPTER XII.


HOW THE FRUIT PERILS WERE MET.—FURTHER DETAILS OF LOCALITIES.


CHAPTER XIII.


THE ADVANCE OF CULTIVATION SOUTHWARD.


CHAPTER XIV.


A LAND OF AGREEABLE HOMES.


CHAPTER XV.


SOME WONDERS BY THE WAY.—YOSEMITE.—MARIPOSA TREES.—MONTEREY.


CHAPTER, XVI.


FASCINATIONS OF THE DESERT.—THE LAGUNA PUEBLO.


CHAPTER XVII.


THE HEART OF THE DESERT.


CHAPTER XVIII.


ON THE BRINK OF THE GRAND CAÑON.—THE UNIQUE MARVEL OF NATURE.


APPENDIX.


A CLIMATE FOR INVALIDS.


THE COMING OF WINTER IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA.


COMPARATIVE TEMPERATURE AROUND THE WORLD.


CALIFORNIA AND ITALY.


FIVE YEARS IN SANTA BARBARA.


Observations made at San Diego City, compiled from Report Of the Chief Signal Officer of the U. S. Army.


EXTREMES OF HEAT AND COLD.


STATEMENTS OF SMALL CROPS.


INDEX.


THE END.


As We Were Saying.


Our Italy.


A Little Journey in the World.


Studies in the South and West.


Their Pilgrimage.


Nordhoff's California.


VALUABLE WORKS OF TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE.


The Capitals of Spanish America.


Charnay's Ancient Cities of the New World.


Hearn's West Indies.


Warner's South and West.


Cesnola's Cyprus.


Bishop's Mexico, California, and Arizona.


Wallace's Malay Archipelago.


Wallace's Geographical Distribution of Animals.


Stanley's Congo, and the Founding of its Free State.


Stanley's Through the Dark Continent.


Stanley's Coomassie and Magdala.


Livingstone's Last Journals.


Livingstone's Expedition to the Zambesi.


Long's Central Africa.


Du Chaillu's Equatorial Africa.


Du Chaillu's Ashango-Land.


Du Chaillu's Land of the Midnight Sun.


Thomson's Voyage of the "Challenger."


Thomson's Southern Palestine and Jerusalem.


Thomson's Central Palestine and Phœnicia.


Thomson's Lebanon, Damascus, and Beyond Jordan.


Bridgman's Algeria.


Pennells' Hebrides.


Shoshone, and Other Western Wonders.


Schweinfurth's Heart of Africa.


Speke's Africa.


Baker's Ismailïa.

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2009-04-05

Темы

Agriculture -- California; Urbanization -- California; Real estate development -- California; Business -- California; California, Southern -- Description and travel

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