It's not a test, you say, but
what would you do with me
as a worm, as a single ice cube,
an escaping gas, a fleck of glitter
on your thumb. I know it's hard.
You couldn't introduce me,
at any party, as your boyfriend.
Or leave me alone with the cheese plate,
the rosé. You couldn't touch my cheek
knowing it was my cheek.
Could you ask my sensory neurons
to bring home the good Ben & Jerry's
with the potato chips and fudge ripples, or trust
my receptor cells to look over your tax return?
I doubt it. On the Internet,
strangers debate the debt we owe as lovers
and the measure to which it is owed.
Some think everything.
Some, nothing. I think
a debt of love is not the same
as one of care. I think there are too many
containers for the soul and a shocking lack
of storage facilities. I think,
in any event, you would handle it beautifully.
Probably you would nest me
in a Snapple cap or an ice cube tray.
And, with a little work, modify all of your shirt
pockets with picture windows
and take me, like you promised,
to Disneyland. Where I could not reach
the height markers. Where I could not,
through any feat of engineering,
be strapped to a boat or a rocket.
You would hold me, then. Show me off
to the Matterhorn, the X-wing, the tail fins
of the Cadillac Mountain Range.
Wow, I would say if I had a mouth.
Wow, you would say with your mouth
that once kissed mine.