Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Earth Day in the Thanatopolis







Mountain View cemetery revisited in the Springtime, is a paradox almost surrational, as if it was a Surrealist conceit. A sprawling manicured sculpture park for the all but entirely forgotten and the totally forgot-- a landscape built on the grandiose narcissism of robber barons and on the humble grief of ordinary people.
Famous internees include Frank Norris whose novel McTeague looked at corruption in a city not far away, in fact visible from here. Here lies as well the remains of the murder victim known sensationally as The Black Dahlia, presumably in reunited form, perhaps a corset of some sort.

Naturally it is more appropriately atmospheric in the dimming light of Autumn. There are quite a lot of recreational visitors during Unholy Week around Hallowe'en and the Day of the Dead.

But it is a another green world of wonder in April and the metaphysical 3-D chessboard feeling remains vividly intact. 






1. The Thanatopolois








Once upon a time you could get a nice place
To wait for the End of Time





Married for all eternity




Landed members of the post mortem gentry





You don't get to choose your neighbors






Good taste is timeless






The church of one's self





Should the earth itself be destroyed in flame
Let no one in this world disturb my bones







Mine is the biggest




Flowers grow from the roof of a tomb





A glimpse of fellow Earth Day folk frolicking
Pivotal Mount Tamalpais in the distance





Heaven is in your mind

(that doesn't mean it's not "real")





2. The Marginal



This old tree has a noticeably odd personality
You get a little eerie living here, I suppose






This can't be good--I remember a viable pond here full of birdlife
I suspect that they are filling it in for more burial ground





Grave desecration....you hate to see that
And it's Easter time too





In years gone by, the birds frequented this lower pond
Neglect may predict a fate similar to that of the red pond above






These trees were here for two long centuries
Watching the dead being buried by the living






3. Final Thoughts



 I don't need no mansion on a hill
Maybe a little cottage in Hobbiton
 where I could rest for ever and ever





 In a nice quiet neighborhood






A happy ending for all





Earth Day, 22 April 2014

Monday, April 21, 2014

The Secret of the Sea, Pt.2,Chap.2. Representing West Coast Marine and Industrial Culture





The Port of Oakland




Like the chapters on the technical side of whaling that comprise a good portion of Moby Dick, the Flaneur offers a guided tour through the actualities and the sumulacra of marine industry, seen here as arte trouve







Next stop Jack London Square
Dig the guy riding the grill on this freight train




Emergency boats and a floating lighthouse






Leaving the Oakland Ferry landing
The floating lighthouse next to the Potomac
Roosevelt's "floating White House"





Shipbuilding at an Alameda boatyard





Bay Ship looking tres hip






The Alameda Ferry landing 






Another container ship Oakland-bound






They're here.... the X Ships have docked
Think of all those toilet flushes







The Military and Prison industries leave picturesque detritus
Decorative bookends on the untamed Bay





C'est moi






  Ur source...






...on Beach street...






... the old main drag






Justly proud 






Behind the curtains







The aqueous theater and its double







Ghosts of the Lighthouse hotel








The wilderness begins at the Golden Gate
Enter the fog after fish or after adventure
The odds are fair that you'll return







Not you, shipwreak







With the printing press came a host of chimeras 







Fugue state on a Sailor Jerry's tide






Everybody needs some kind of ventilator






 San Francisco was a hard-core Union town




The first settlers may have landed
 in pods from who-knows-where






   Heavy metal led to the Industrial Revolution






With your street car visions of cannery row,
sang the prophet
The cable cars do stop at this former cannery





Made in San Francisco





Wooden ships fashioned here






Built to last






From Penny Arcade to today's extreme video parlors
The Amusement Industry is big business
Laughing Sal retired to the Musee Mecanique
After a career at Playland at the Beach.





Tour boats stay afloat






The Port of Oakland full moon approach






 Another perilous voyage
Survived














December 2013-April 2014