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  1. Lech – I agree. Whenever I go uptown for a meeting I get really pissed about how much it sucks to work down here – other than the commute, downtown has nothing going for it. (though I am starting to find some of the side streets charming in an old ny sort of way)

  2. As Infinite Jester pointed out, Mercy Street is a tribute to the poet Anne Sexton, who killed herself after a life of mental illness. Here is one of her poems, 45 Mercy Street:

    In my dream,
    drilling into the marrow
    of my entire bone,
    my real dream,
    I’m walking up and down Beacon Hill
    searching for a street sign –
    namely MERCY STREET.
    Not there.

    I try the Back Bay.
    Not there.
    Not there.
    And yet I know the number.
    45 Mercy Street.
    I know the stained-glass window
    of the foyer,
    the three flights of the house
    with its parquet floors.
    I know the furniture and
    mother, grandmother, great-grandmother,
    the servants.
    I know the cupboard of Spode
    the boat of ice, solid silver,
    where the butter sits in neat squares
    like strange giant’s teeth
    on the big mahogany table.
    I know it well.
    Not there.

    Where did you go?
    45 Mercy Street,
    with great-grandmother
    kneeling in her whale-bone corset
    and praying gently but fiercely
    to the wash basin,
    at five A.M.
    at noon
    dozing in her wiggy rocker,
    grandfather taking a nap in the pantry,
    grandmother pushing the bell for the downstairs maid,
    and Nana rocking Mother with an oversized flower
    on her forehead to cover the curl
    of when she was good and when she was…
    And where she was begat
    and in a generation
    the third she will beget,
    me,
    with the stranger’s seed blooming
    into the flower called Horrid.

    I walk in a yellow dress
    and a white pocketbook stuffed with cigarettes,
    enough pills, my wallet, my keys,
    and being twenty-eight, or is it forty-five?
    I walk. I walk.
    I hold matches at street signs
    for it is dark,
    as dark as the leathery dead
    and I have lost my green Ford,
    my house in the suburbs,
    two little kids
    sucked up like pollen by the bee in me
    and a husband
    who has wiped off his eyes
    in order not to see my inside out
    and I am walking and looking
    and this is no dream
    just my oily life
    where the people are alibis
    and the street is unfindable for an
    entire lifetime.

    Pull the shades down –
    I don’t care!
    Bolt the door, mercy,
    erase the number,
    rip down the street sign,
    what can it matter,
    what can it matter to this cheapskate
    who wants to own the past
    that went out on a dead ship
    and left me only with paper?

    Not there.

    I open my pocketbook,
    as women do,
    and fish swim back and forth
    between the dollars and the lipstick.
    I pick them out,
    one by one
    and throw them at the street signs,
    and shoot my pocketbook
    into the Charles River.
    Next I pull the dream off
    and slam into the cement wall
    of the clumsy calendar
    I live in,
    my life,
    and its hauled up
    notebooks.

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