Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Second Sight: Remembering Some San Francisco Neighborhoods - 1. i. Duboce Triangle
.
i.
Duboce Triangle
Gentle, belovèd neighborhood of trees;
Of parklands mature and hilltop retreats;
Of paths and flowers; of contemplation –
Do Calla lilies or agapanthus,
Either lifting fugaciously white cups,
Or bursting periwinkle fleurs-de-lys,
Bloom anywhere quite as closely as ‘neath
The sharp blue skies of Duboce Triangle?
Paradise for dogs, our Leporello
Enjoyed his birthright and would promenade
Master of his own domain on the steep trails
Winding atop the eucalyptus-treed
And rocky outcrops of Buena Vista
And its companion of Corona Heights.
But it was Duboce Park he loved the most,
His home turf where he’d socialize daily,
Affording every canine urge inclined
Opportunity to run free under
Those late-afternoon suns of their freedom.
And happy were those dark Friday evenings
I’d come home from work on the subway train,
Which broke the surface behind the Safeway,
For when taking the J-Line, I’d get off
After the streetcar rounded the corner
And passed the postcard-perfect Lutheran church.
Victorian gem of a house of prayer,
Parish and congregation were kicked out
Of the Lutheran synod in the ‘90s
For letting its Gay congregants marry
‘Neath its towering steeple of the faith.
Hands folded in belief should ever pray
For bigotry’s removal in others –
At least, that’s what Christ himself tried to teach.
But these evenings, alighting on Church Street,
I’d sometimes have to think of our dinner,
And celebrate my little neighborhood
Provided rich options along those lines.
And such options too! For a few doors down
From the wide portals of the Lutheran church
Stood a Vietnamese-owned green grocer.
Their choice of produce beat the goliath
Corporate supermarket across the way
In both selection and superb freshness.
Great culinary curiosities
Inhabited that small shop’s grocery shelves,
And to here I’d come for Italian-grown
Sour cherries in a blue and white jar.
But if fatigue curtailed a mood to cook,
More choices waited as I then turned right
And started the gentle uphill walk home,
For tree-lined 14th Street – street of windows –
Offered a spacious Chinese take-away
With a moderate price and some great tastes.
And if other flavors were desired,
CyBelle’s Pizza stood just across the street.
One item on their menu paid tribute
To local San Francisco food culture,
For although many may have heard of it,
Few know how Greek Goddess salad dressing
Was devised in a hotel in this town.
CyBelle’s pizza version came with pesto,
Which became topped with garlic, broccoli,
Olives, feta and mozzarella cheese.
Molten-hot, straight from their oven and boxed,
What king ate better than we lucky few?
While walking onwards, upwards on to home,
This great street of bay windows provided
Unguarded glimpses of domestic life,
For many people were at home by dusk
Who never bothered with blinds right away,
And a glance casual, up to second floors,
Revealed dining room tables being set
As TVs glowed in adjacent spaces
With the evening news, more often than not.
At moments like this, I’d feel connected
To these strangers, who were nevertheless
Close to me simply by being right here,
Living ordinary, contented lives –
Lives, though different, still somehow matching mine.
But strolling onwards, at the next corner,
I’d peek through the glass of a unique shop.
This ground-floor establishment sold one thing:
Handmade, finish-it-yourself furniture
Of every size, make and variety.
Something for each room waited in that store,
And walking by the well-lit but closed place
Also lent comfort, for think of how many
Of the dining tables now being laid
For a communal suppertime above
Came from the hands of the woodworker here;
And I myself bought two CD cabinets
Which I never bothered to refinish,
Preferring to see the natural wood.
And continuing, past the drycleaner’s
With their wall-shelves of antique sad irons,
A few more paces would bring me up to
My treasured Noe Street, and heading left,
Just a few doors from the intersection,
I could climb our flat’s terrazzo steps home.
Yet the sort of places I had walked past
Were not uncommon for this neighborhood,
Where unique, one-of-a-kind businesses
Found soil to bloom in Duboce Triangle.
Some of my favorites I could even see
From the expanse of my home’s front window.
Such a case was the Peacock Music shop
With its resident black cat at the door
To greet those coming to re-string guitars,
Or browse banjos, or slap a tambourine.
While closer to us, and across the way,
Stood the venerable Thai House restaurant –
A place so delectable, it opened
Two Duboce Triangle establishments;
The original spot on Noe Street,
Cozy and intimate in which to eat,
And a larger venue on Market Street
Just two blocks down the hill from the first one.
I can still taste their special green curry,
With its mid-notes of ginger and lemongrass,
As a perfect complement to steamed fish.
But across Henry Street from Thai House was
Our regular eatery, where we’d go
To feel less homesick at least twice a week.
Many felt that way, and Take Sushi
Had walls plastered with tokens of family
In the form of postcards patrons, like us,
Had sent the restaurant from around the globe,
Expressing how much they missed “home cooking.”
An example of which, and mind you, I’d
Lived an unbroken four years in Japan,
It was in Take-zushi I’d first had
That savory delight of broiled kama –
The collar of the hamachi the chef
Bought fresh daily for the sushi and rolls.
Yaki-hama-kama was one of those
Esoteric sushi-family dishes
Relished in quiet peace among themselves,
Before the secret leaked, that is, and now
The formerly cheap-as-dirt cut of fish
Is found on many high-brow menus for
A price to rival that of caviar.
Take Sushi could be seen from our flat,
But still closer – in fact, across the street –
The Jumpin’ Java Coffee House beckoned.
A spacious place for regulars to work,
A single cup of artist-friendly joe
Was ticket enough to spend the whole day
People-watching and doing some writing.
This is where I outlined my short story
“Right Hand, Left Hand,” the central, turning point
In my Ni-Chome Tales about Gay life
In Tokyo’s Community neighborhood,
For perched upon Jumpin’ Java’s hard seats,
With their extra-strong coffee coursing through,
It made an oddly purgatorial
Environment to think of my past life
And where my present one could be going.
The owner was young, a fit blond man who
I hardly saw in the shop when open,
But late at night, long after its doors closed,
I’d see him in the shop, cleaning alone,
Naked, except for his tighty-whities.
Onto the waistband, he’d clip his Walkman,
And with the headphones no doubt blaring full,
He’d run the big, rotary floor buffer,
Keeping his coffee house shined to a tee.
I was aware – somehow – this slight young man
Was not the owner of the building where
His caffeine business thrived, for the landlord
Was something of a Duboce Triangle
Real estate magnate, owning quite a few
Of the stores and flat buildings on the street.
He was a taciturn Asian man who drove
A late-80s Cadillac, often seen
Parked in front of his own home, a few doors
Removed from where we lived on Noe Street.
Other one-of-a-kind establishments
Were also not far removed from our home.
One place, around the corner on 15th,
Was the retired Scandinavian
Sailors’ home, placed where it was on purpose
Because the “Young Scandinavian Club”
– An old-style venue for socializing –
Lived barely half-a-block down on Market.
On Market, too, was the Swedish deli,
Perfect for both eat-in meals or take-out,
And where our friend John liked to go often.
He loved the reasonable price so much,
Occasional bouts of food poisoning
Which he procured from the establishment
Would never dissuade him from going back.
If one cannot live on herring, then one
Prob’ly has no business living at all.
However, it was arguably nicer
To visit another Market Street spot,
Not very far down from it on Church Street.
Just Desserts was an unpretentious shop
Where you could get cake and sip on coffee,
For how just it was to come here after
A film caught at the Castro Theater,
Or with friends dining in the neighborhood.
Their pink-domed princess cakes, in full size or
Single-serve portions, were the perfect cap
To evenings spent in rowdy company
Or a special, one-on-one date for two.
And in such a relaxed mood with coffee,
Let me relay my Saturday routine,
For the morning could find me stepping out
To stroll amongst the tall, mature ash trees
And flowering planter beds on my street,
The sky preternaturally blue, and birds
Singing from the urban boughs overhead.
If I’d started late enough, I could catch
People setting out things for “sidewalk sales,”
San Francisco’s local equivalent
To other places’ yard or garage sales.
Interesting books always wound up in these,
And I bought Gerry Wills’ engrossing tome
Roman Culture at one; an in-depth look
Into Ancient Rome’s concept of itself
Through the civilization’s poetry.
Other days nabbed me a rotisserie,
And brand-new bread machine for twenty bucks –
A device that’s served my kneading needs now
For so long, it might need to be replaced.
But if no sales were set up, never mind;
I was probably on my way towards
The Italian deli on Market Street,
Next to the well-liked brunch destination
Of Bagdad Café, even though the fare
At La Mediterranée, so close by,
Was lusciously better and more filling,
For their sweet-tanged savories in phyllo
– Layer upon buttery layer – were
Hard to find duplicated anywhere.
In the deli, perhaps I’d come to buy
Some of their fresh, handmade pasta for home,
Or search for jarred anchovies, or capers.
But always, it was hard for me to leave
Without picking up a bottle of their
Specially imported limoncello;
And let’s face it, who would want to leave there
Without such a sweet and hard to find treat?
And once I had what I’d come here to get,
Right in front of the shop’s doors, there would be
Stacks of the city’s Sunday newspaper.
All on the honor system, you’d drop your
Dollar in the tin cup sitting nearby,
And heft your hundred-paged behemoth ‘neath
Your arm as you continued your walking.
But I was in no hurry to head home,
And stopping by right at the other corner,
I’d slip into a place called Cafe Flore.
Even the invocation of the name’s
Enough to make old-timers like me flush,
For ordering a plain cup of coffee,
I’d sit with my weekend paper, and cruise,
And read, and people-watch and feel as if
The future could only be the brighter,
All as bougainvillea and roses climbed
On the trellis enclosures making walls
Round about this al fresco coffee shop
– Under preternaturally sharp blue skies –
Where nothing but garden scents and warm smiles
Invited one to sit and feel at home.
_
- 6
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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