#title Notes from the Inner City #author Ursula K. Le Guin #SORTauthors Ursula K. Le Guin; #date 2006 #source [[https://www.fifthestate.org/archive/373-fall-2006/notes-from-the-inner-city]] #lang en #pubdate 2015-03-28 #notes Fifth Estate #373, Fall 2006 Daughter of itinerants, ungrateful refusers of benefits and charity, in terror of the all-embracing arms I turned from the tabernacles of turkey and progeny of toothpaste, I ran and hid from the love that damns and pardons, I dodged the draft from the golden doors and let the wild west wind carry me with torn newspapers, cigarette butts, condoms, up against the chainlink fence at the world’s ends in a red November evening. There were some others there. They had lit fires. I found some trash and lit a fire too. You keep away from the hyped-up kids and the old guys fighting Troy and Nam and the preachers even here creating dogma out of antimatter. You don’t listen to the rant. You listen for whispers, sometimes a song. One song ends arise and unbuild it again One begins From far, from eve and morning An old song says O genus infelix humanum and the children sing come away come out and play the moon doth shine as bright as day You find your family where you least expect it but you have to let them go. A lot of them are dead before you met them. Or not born. You know them. Your eyes meet for a moment in the flickering light by the traschcan fire. Hey, brother. Hey, little auntie. Hello, baby. After a while you get around to marking a leanto on somebody else’s shack with pieces of plywood, plastic, cardboard and the pieces hold each other up as the keystone holds the ancient arch if you do it right. Scraps of aluminum, bright junk, bottlecaps, decorate our shelters, particular and elaborate as butterflies or snowflakes or human eyes. We inhabit them a while, each alone. Then we move on, because we fear our longing. Because we wanted home so much and looked for it so long, we found no house of stone or wood or word to hold it. So all around the city they call sacred we live in the exurbs of certainty, the shantytowns of righteousness. They fear our little separate fires scattered like stars in the indifferent night, and shut their ears when voices cry all down the silent streets between the shuttered windows, the steel-grilled banks, the locked cathedrals, children, children, come away -- Ursula K. LeGuin 2006