Pedal

Jenny Johnson

I have a friend who measures desire


by stillness, who is most turned on


by the person in the room who meditates


without flinching. The librarian, too,


in the Manuscripts Division, handling


the patron who can't seem to stay seated


warns: I will serve you the smallest items first


as a knit sweater slides off a chair's back


into a loose knot. All day we could have


watched clusters of blue bottle gentians


flexing their umbrellas open and shut


as bumblebees submerged head-first


into one bloom after another,


dizzy subspaces, partially open


paper dressing rooms, trying on things


till they'd wrapped themselves


in a good dusting of pollen. Everywhere


intimate containers seem to be in motion.


The raised bed full of squash flowers.


The black latex glove masking


the bare hand ladling bowls


of wedding soup for the lunch crowd.


My quick pedal revved by the world.