Lancaster, a final frontier
Sammy Lê | Poetry
California State Prison, 2018
she rides across the San Gabriel Mountains to the Mojave Desert town
the blue of the sky
matters
don’t leave us like everyone else did
was what she knew they really meant
when they all stood and smiled thinly
whenever their time had come
and she was due 90 miles
back south on campus
to teach free men
we need you
more
than they do
she rides through Lancaster empty and empty
dusty like the end of the world where reborn ghosts writhed free
from purgatory and reinhabited flesh
to pour over Dostoyevsky in the yard
she rides through the gate
the forest in their eyes matters
and in the wilderness of the bent spine: rushing streams—
a youngness again, a youngness again—
the sort of unraveling laughter that springs forth
from a grin and a wrinkle in the brow
half joyful discovery
half light-hearted self-mockery—why did it take me this long?
not teaching a child to ride a bike
but the awe at a seed that defied the parable
rocky soil—no good for flowers
but let us not scoff at the
diaspora of the weeds
for their pale yellow is
a mattering shade
Sammy Lê is a poet and bartender from Houston. He is pursuing his MFA from UMass Amherst, where he was a Rose Fellow, the winner of the Deborah Slosberg Memorial Prize, and an instructor of creative writing. He was shortlisted for the 2023 Alpine Prize in Poetry and has poems forthcoming in Poet Lore and Strange Horizons.