Megan Kim
Wherever we go we look carefully.

Range of Light, Muir called the Sierra Nevadas.

And in the last hours of sun, we can see it:


the lored Gold Mountain, luring 

Chinese men like M’s ancestors 

with the promise of Californian wealth.


Our own faces, gilded for a breath.

Then it blinks out, as all illusions do 

when conditions cease to be right. 


We were most American 

in movement, most in range 

of that golden glow when 


passing through. All I can say

is I love these small white churches 

barely visible across the long fields.


I roll down the car window 

to angle my voice against 

mountainsides as M and I turn hairpins 


to toss our small mixed 

bodies into May-cold rivers: 

the American River, the Smith River, 


whatever streams of snowmelt 

we can suffer. Once, our parents 

were verbs in the mouths of siren 


cities, gateways to their parents’

dreams: San Francisco, Los Angeles, 

Seattle, songs strung too quickly into codas. 


Now the persistent pull 

to put them in our rearviews,

this rugged-dust, gas-station-cigarette, 


hand-me-down nation 

fitted like a crumpled fortune

into our ungovernable forms.
from the journal TINDERBOX POETRY JOURNAL
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