Traveling Time
By Lisa Marie Basile
Published 1 January 2021
would have never gone to another city
would have never caught the moth
and named her Sofia
would have never made milk on my own
would have never filed my teeth for you
you liked these little circular nubs
the better to suck you with my dear
I would have sat in an open field
with my body a new white loaf of bread
I would have gone up to the body
Dorothy, what happens next?
Oh, that’s easy. We become violent.
when I get to heaven what time will it be?
would have never struck you in the face
all of those times. would never have
made you buy me books that bruised you
when I thought you loved another girl.
would never have built cities of glass
with all the glass I had smashed
somewhere in another universe
you said every possibility is occurring
all the time all at once somewhere
all the mirroring worlds all the milk
spilled and caught and swallowed
and smoothed across the face of the moon.
would have never desired brass
or strings or Sisyphus. it is all tiring.
a man who plays music with his mouth:
it’s a scam.
would never have cupped my hands
in the spring of summer, or knelt at the sea
where my ancestors were born while thinking
of all the other waters.
would never have been with two hands
when I have so much suffering to do.
to stroke and be stroked and to build castles
requires an anatomy that is beyond all of this—
it’s simple. we’re so simple.
I would have never been so simple.
I would have been Marosa
with her feet up at the bench of god,
swatting flies. I would have.