The splendid body is meat, flexor 
and flesh pumping, pulling, anti- 
gravity maverick just standing 
upright all over museums and 
in line for the bus and in the laundry 
aisle where it’s just standing there 
smelling all the detergent like 
it’s no big deal. So what if a couple 
of its squishy parts are suspended 
within, like beach-bungled jellyfish 
in a shelved jar, not doing anything? 
Nothing on this side of the quantum 
tunnel is perfect. The splendid body, 
though, is splendid in the way 
it keeps its steamy blood in, no matter 
how bad it blushes. And splendid 
in how it opens its mouth and 
these invisible vibrations come 
rippling out—if you put your wrist 
right up to it when that happens 
it feels somewhat like the feet 
of many bees. The splendid body 
loves the juniper smell of gin, loves 
the warmth of printer-fresh paper, 
and the sound fallen leaves make 
under the wheel of a turning car. 
If you touch it between the legs, 
the splendid body will quicken 
like bubbles in a just-on teakettle. 
It knows it can’t exist forever, so 
it’s collecting as many flavors as it can— 
saffron, rainwater, fish-skin, chive. 
Do not distract it from its purpose, 
which is to feel everything it can find. 
Copyright © 2023 by Rebecca Lindenberg. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 27, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.
