So many would-be vampires
who confuse
“the prosaic light of day.”
for the bright moon.
Isn’t night enough for dreaming?
is the accusation.
What bullshit
is this?
We want to stroll our apatites
On the avenues in broad daylight thank you.
What does it take
to be astonished these days?
ED
Pre-Apocalyptic San Francisco
Which explorers found SF Bay and
which missed it?
Do you know the orifice of the bay
is so small and only golden-mouthed
if you are looking at the chrysostomos
from the hills of Oakland. You have to be like so many things, away from it to
appreciate it. But it is to say you can only see the light at the end of the
anus from deep inside the alimentary canal, where the sun don’t shine, not when
you are outside of it. So it is not surprising that Drake and so many hundreds
of eyes floated by it. Imagine seeing an asshole and predicting a gateway to the
promised land. It boggles.
For 200 years after Fernand Cortez,
la vainqueur du Mexique, on August 13th
1521, came to the Pacific Coast, no one found SF Bay.
In 1542 Cabrillo missed it.
In 1565ff the Portuguese galeões from Manila on their way to Acapulco
used the northern Pacific current and came to Northern California to turn right
& sail down the coast in journey after journey & missed SF Bay every
time.
In 1579 Francis Drake and his pirates, landing in Drake’s Bay south of
Point Reyes, 30 miles northwest of SF, claimed California for Queen Elizabeth, leaving
a plaque and staying 6 weeks. While in Drake’s Bay south of Point Reyes, they
never saw SF bay. The Brass Plate, they “found” in 1936, was a hoax invented by
local historians as a practical joke. It was only debunked in the1970’s when
someone noticed you didn’t spell Elizabeth Regina with a V. The Brass Plate was
displayed at the Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley until 2005.
In 1595 Sebastião Rodrigues Soromenho, a Portuguese explorer appointed
by Felipe II de España/Filipe I de Portugal, made harbor in Drake’s bay and
renamed it La Bahia de San Francisc,o
then he suffered shipwreck and built a replacement craft with the help of the
local native people and made it back to Acapulco. Afraid of another shipwreck,
he avoided/missed the entrance to SF Bay.
In 1602 Sebastian Vizcaino sailed to Drake’s Bay—well, La Bahia de … and named many places, like
Monterey and San Diego and Santa Barbara on the way, but not SF Bay.
In 1750 the Russians came to the West Coast and colonized Krepost Ross, from Ros or Rus, a poetic name
for Russia, not a Scotsman, 85 miles north of SF near the Russian River, which
they called the Slavyanka. They took
thousands of otter pelts. They did not see the Bay.
In 1769 Gaspar de Portola hiked up the California Coast from Baja with
60 men, including Juan Crespi, who kept a diary. A hunting party of unnamed soldiers
from this larger band finally saw SF Bay, looking from the top of Sweeney Ridge
west of what is now San Bruno on Montara Mountain, the northern spur of the
Santa Cruz Mountains. So the bay was discovered by accident and on horseback in
early November 1769.
In 1808 the Russians sent a secret mission to Northern California to
bury plaques in several places, like Trinidad Bay, Bodega Bay (Port Rumyantsev) and San Francisco, claiming
possession of every important harbor. It was the first real affront of The Cold
War.
In 1846, Commodore Sloat claimed California for the US on July 7th
& Commander Montgomery arrived in the village of Yerba Buena aboard the USS
Portsmouth on July 9th.
January 30, 1847 Lieutenant Bartlett, the first American Alcalde, changed the name of Yerba Buena
(Good Grass) to San Francisco (Brother bird, Sister rock). He also named Sloat
Blvd, Montgomery St, and Portsmouth Sq. when, as Mayor, he drew the maps. He
who draws the maps, as Amerigo Vespucci said, names the world. After all, who
was Adam to name the animals?
January 1848, James Wilson Marshall found gold while building a
sawmill on the American River north of Sacramento.
2 February 1848, Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the Mexican-American
War, 1846-1848. Mexico was paid 15 million dollars for everything above the Rio
Grande, including Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah and parts of Wyoming
and Colorado, plus of course all of Alta California.
Finally, in May, 1848, Sam Brannan ran down Market Street, turned left on
Montgomery Street & skipped into Portsmouth Square shouting “Gold Gold Gold” holding a bottle filled with
gold dust. 4 months after Marshall, people finally believed the stories were
true. The New York Herald printed the news. In 1847 San Francisco had 80
buildings and shacks; by December 1849, 100,000 people lived there. It was a
city constructed by the delusional for the chumps from all over the world.
In 1849, Shouting Aiaia or Aeaea, they came upon what Garci Rodriguez
de Montalvo in 1500 called the Island of Queen Califia, which they fell upon to
fondle the gold from the Sierra’s streams and became swine, but happy swine,
and, like all sailors turend to swine, they forgot to go home. Who handed the
shovels to the usufructious bastards?
So the intoxicated
goldfilchers abandoned their swift ships in San Francisco. And it was a
liitericious feast of hollow ships sitting uselessly at shoreside. They say
hundreds of ships, a murder of prows!—Is this the face that munched a thousand chips?— packed the bay by SF
elbow to elbow or yardarm to yardarm, beak to spanker, hull to hull. You could
walk across the bay from the Yerba Buena cove to Alcatraz Island.
Some clever Aeneas
decided to beach the orphaned craft opposite Portsmouth Square and beyond along the Embarcadero in a solid row of ready-mades, some jibboom sword on their prows
piercing the shore, others bassackwards, creating a neighborhood faster than
you can say HUD. They created the Barbary
coast and the edges of China Town and the hills full of Chileans & Irish until
someone from an Aussie gang called The Sydney Ducks burned the silly hillside
of substandard shacks along Goat Hill. On which they hung a semaphore, like a stick man with long arms, to signal the arrival of ships, ergo Telegraph Hill.
At war with the
inherent plagiary of cities, nothing can be comfortable being itself or
becoming itself, but must have what belongs to others. The Shakespearean fish
stare from the deep waters and laugh at what they see just over the shore’s
edge:
You are either astounded, like the bespectacled in They Live. Or astounding, like the feckless walkers. It isn’t impossible to pick out what really lives on the ground and
what really climbs? As D.T. Suzuki said, Zen masters walk on their feet like
everyone else, “only a few inches above the ground.” So what ascends is
delicious and what hugs the ground is insipid. It differentiates the pointless walkers
from the ones who right now are pumping their terrified blood. You have no
right to walk in a city without being terrified. A scoch of terror makes you thrive, barely contained terror. It doesn’t just strike from hijacked airliners
either. It comes in with the tide in the morning and flushes out of the houses at night.
A city is the production of the
appetites themselves of the people who live in it. It is not the answer to
their problem; it is the invention of the problem itself. We do not invent
solutions to desire, we invent desire-puzzles because we are factories of
desire itself and languish in it, bathe in it, swim in it all day long through
the Boulevards, the collectors and the arterials. To track them is a blur but
suffice it to say four of them came together at the corner of Market and Beale
at 10 minutes before nine o’clock, Noor, Jack, Sameer and Danseur and then fragmented into four corners of the Bay Area, one toward the sea, one to the right, one
above us, and one falling into the abyss. Sameer saw them getting off the Muni
car and they seemed to touch one another and she smiled and he spoke. But
Hitchcock-like the sound was not there, only the gestures. So desire
constructed the scene as end of the inbound line setting and unanalyzed action,
no music to make it romantic, but rather the pornographic absence of buffering
music in favor of the troubling tuneless eroticism of deboarding and plunging
into the traffic on Market Street.
So many ghosts in any average city.
In this case you can smell the residue of what lived before you and still lives
in our imaginations and what will live as well. “Past or passing or to come.”
Who to pay attention to?
The car was a Camaro, late model, a
travesty of a muscle car with a few additions to make it more imposing. It was unearthly
cerulean blue. Inside a young man watched with curiosity and no emotion as Jack
and Noor got off the streetcar. They seemed to be together from a distance,
especially when Jack approached her for a minute and spoke to her. She nodded
and then smiled and walked away to meet Maryam and go with her to South Park
and work. Jack looked back at her in a guilty way as he walked in the other
direction to his work at Yellow Dick’s.
The man in the Camaro, Sameer, was sitting with his car idling in a red zone.
He was pitched into the depths of the blue devils jumped when he heard a bus
honk and put the car in gear. Heartsick he roared away heading south to the
startup Future Games in Daily City.
Behind him a large mud splattered Ford 250 truck with Quebec plates also
started up and with a growl followed the women.
The ascent from the maelstrom
suddenly thrust into the swirl of the
centrifuge,
an unfolding of the “widening gyre”
being thrown, “Un coup de des
jamais n'abolira le hasard,”
Noor was helplessly thinking in French.
Walked out my work doors onto the corner of Beale and Market for over ten years. Which is neither here nor there but true nonetheless...
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