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FROM RUSSIAN HILL.
A strange day—bright and still; Strange for the stillness here, For the strong trade-winds blow With such a steady sweep it seems like rest, Forever steadily across the crest Of Russian Hill. Still now and clear,— So clear you count the houses spreading wide In the fair cities on the farther side Of our broad bay; And brown Goat Island lieth large between, Its brownness brightening into sudden green From rains of yesterday. Blue? Blue above of Californian sky, Which has no peer on earth for its pure flame; Bright blue of bay and strait spread wide below, And, past the low, dull hills that hem it so,— Blue as the sky, blue as the placid bay,— Blue mountains far away. Thanks this year for the early rains that came To bless us, meaning Summer by and by. This is our Spring-in-Autumn, making one The Indian Summer tenderness of sun— Its hazy stillness, and soft far-heard sound— And the sweet riot of abundant spring, The greenness flaming out from everything, The sense of coming gladness in the ground. From this high peace and purity look down; Between you and the blueness lies the town. Under those huddled roofs the heart of man Beats warmer than this brooding day, Spreads wider than the hill-rimmed bay, And throbs to tenderer life, were it but seen, Than all this new-born, all-enfolding green! Within that heart lives still All that one guesses, dreams, and sees— Sitting in sunlight, warm, at ease— From this high island,—Russian Hill.
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