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  Soho bestowed E.B. White's gift of loneliness 
                          on me during the summer of 1980, and I am still grateful. 
                          From March through the end of August of that year, I 
                          lived on Crosby Street in New York City's Soho, one 
                          of the least transformed streets in this strange artistic-industrial 
                          area. I was getting over a broken relationship, a five 
                          year co-habitation that was, essentially, a marriage. 
                          Soho is where I went to sort out my heart and mind and 
                          to experience the many small and large devastations 
                          that come with a broken love affair. 
 Soho 
                          had great charm then, and, despite the colossal changes 
                          that have taken place there, it does still. I found 
                          that many of its unique characteristics served me well 
                          in my period of convalescence. The first of these was, 
                          simply, that not many people lived there twenty years 
                          ago. When the long lines of trucks left the sides of 
                          the streets in the afternoon, and the art speculators 
                          and tourists fled with them, not many personalities 
                          were left. For such a large area--even speaking of so 
                          many years ago, I am excluding weekends--it was sparsely 
                          populated. So that often I could be quite alone with 
                          my loneliness, free to roam from street to street in 
                          near or even complete solitude, feeling my melancholy 
                          nurtured by silence and space. Hearing my own footsteps 
                          clack and clomp in loud singularity during an evening 
                          stroll was often antidote enough for some feeling of 
                          wrack that suddenly overtook me. And it helped, at times, 
                          to feel my hurt was the only hurt around, and Soho let 
                          me feel that easily.
 In 
                          particular, this was true of my street, Crosby Street, 
                          with its empty longitudinal expanse and its rough cobblestones. 
                          At times, there was literally no one walking or driving 
                          down this street for close to an hour. I would stand 
                          outside my building and communicate with this emptiness. I could 
                          sigh deeply, as the heartsick are wont to do, and Crosby 
                          Street, with great beneficence, ingested my woe, accepted 
                          it, seemed to request more. It was constant in its willingness, 
                          a big loyal mute friend that was always there when I 
                          came home alone. I felt especially tender toward the 
                          cobblestones. They seemed to me, even in their density, 
                          a sort of delicate and vulnerable touch within the context 
                          of all this cast iron strength. There were not a few 
                          days when I spoke mentally to these cobblestones which 
                          had so obviously been planted by human hands, and I 
                          felt very protective toward them.
 
 Soho's 
                          sparseness also had the simple but startling effect 
                          of granting a lot more attention to individuals. This 
                          was an incomparable gift. It was not unusual, for example, 
                          to see a single person walking on the opposite side 
                          of the street, making it just you and him or her, strolling 
                          for minutes along together on opposite sides, the only 
                          humans around in all this real estate. I never saw people 
                          more clearly, more distinctly than in Soho. That meant 
                          much to me. It was a form of human contact that was 
                          almost intimate--it was certainly private in one respect--and 
                          if I didn't actually meet the person walking toward 
                          me and then by me, I did feel there was an exchange 
                          nevertheless. I can still remember faces and nods and 
                          hellos and unabashed eye contact. This contact was my 
                          first tentative reaching out for closeness again.
 Because 
                          there were so few people in Soho then, each person, 
                          as I said, became dramatically unique in your eyes. 
                          This was particularly wonderful with women. Soho had--has, 
                          still, if you are observant--beautiful women, healthy, 
                          energetic and alluring. There were times when I was 
                          more grateful for that than for anything else. Women 
                          I saw were often dramatically highlighted as they passed 
                          by stark industrial facades and closed diners and empty 
                          street corners. I could gaze at them for minutes instead 
                          of seconds as is the case uptown, follow them and their 
                          colors and clothes coming toward me, and even begin 
                          a smile almost a block away. It's hard to imagine that occurring 
                          in Soho today. And they were generous with their smiles! 
                          I can remember a pair of eyes, the way a dress clung 
                          to a stomach, lovely legs, the way a woman turned a 
                          corner and was off. I had four months of this display, 
                          and though at times it made me ache with wanting, it 
                          also made me feel vibrant and cheery and full of awe. 
                          Those were feelings I sorely needed after leaving a 
                          relationship that had left me numb and cold.
 
 Another 
                          of Soho's particularities that helped me gently through 
                          the spring was its weather. Because Soho is a separate 
                          commonwealth of sorts--I think its architecture has 
                          a great deal to do with this--it seems to have its own 
                          weather. This is singularly true of rain. A rainstorm 
                          in Soho can have as much significance and drama as it 
                          does on an island. During that particular spring there 
                          were three or four very violent rainstorms, and experiencing 
                          them in Soho was restorative. A rain in Soho always 
                          brought out a childlike feeling in me. As the water 
                          came washing down with pulsing force, I sat in my small 
                          loft, huddled with my yellow lamps in the cool humid 
                          obscurity, enjoying every noisy minute of it. I would 
                          leave the windows open and thrill to the loud rain and 
                          occasional spritzing I got as the wind blew some of 
                          the storm into my room. The thunder crashed and rumbled, 
                          and I felt an exquisite blanket of innocence and youth 
                          and openheartedness as it rained and rained and rained.
 There 
                          were other attractions. Like playing basketball at Spring 
                          and Thompson on the small court where local Italian-American 
                          kids took up sides. They still do. Or the adjacent playground 
                          where I used to come after work and watch children play. 
                          And the gigantic R & K Bakery on Prince near West 
                          Broadway, defunct now, which was one of the biggest--if 
                          not the biggest in the city. "One day you're the 
                          biggest, the next day someone else is," a worker 
                          once told me. By necessity, it was a nocturnal operation. 
                          I remember going out walking at 2 am and coming upon 
                          four or five men in wrinkled whites sitting on a stoop 
                          taking a breather as the building heaved out its concentrated 
                          essences of fresh bread. That sugared wind snapped my 
                          olfactory senses wide awake.
 There 
                          were a few special shops and stands, a favorite bar 
                          or two, perhaps, and book stores. Bu though I liked 
                          these very much, every neighborhood can usually claim 
                          the same. It was in the end this superb gift of loneliness, 
                          couched in so restful, poetic and accepting a manner, 
                          that made living in Soho then so good, and made it so 
                          difficult to leave. Soho had been with me in my time 
                          of need. For four brief months I shared with it everything 
                          I had, and it said, yes, all right, that's good. This 
                          kindness had its effect. Because when I finally did 
                          leave, I felt patched together not in some haphazard 
                          fashion, but that the job had been done well, smooth, 
                          strong and seamless.  
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