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Poetry by JC Snyder

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  • written by an old woman

    around me in a stillness, a lonlieness
    composed of slow shadows and lights
    this old house takes its rest with a creak
    echoing down the hall to my musty bedroom
    shared by only one, the creaks reminding me
    of how my knees used to climb stairs
    and how these bedsprings used to jump when
    he was alive and how the kids used
    to clatter and creak through the kitchen
    how the years turn like a watch rusting

    click click creak

    how memories torture me daily but at night they
    meekly creak a complaint before I tie them up
    and flush them with the efficiency of a proud soldier.

    August 16, 2012

  • Braiding

    We, with long fingers and
    deft movements,
    tame freshly washed hair
    into three equal parts.

    Without thought,
    strands become one,
    twisting over and
    over to fall gently down
    a smooth bare back

    in the mirror,
    we turn, preening-
    smooth the sides
    stroke the length of braid.
    Ghostly generations
    nod approval.

    August 14, 2012

  • remembering…."on my back, ceiling fan above"

    an older poem revisited… enjoy! happy friday~

    On my back- Ceiling Fan Above
    http://www.presssendpoetry.com/2010/03/on-my-back-ceiling-fan-above.html

    August 10, 2012

  • IF

    if our whole lives
    spun off like a voyager into
    the deepest frozen
    fingers of space

    i would still… i still would

    August 9, 2012

  • bread is baking

    bread is baking –
    blue hairnet bakers
    finish their shift;
    Baltimore rises.

    August 2, 2012

  • campfire memories

    Soft white pine needles
    Have a way
    Of smoking:

    Crackling first
    Then plumes of white wispy
    Faces form,
    Smoke so dense and peering
    From soft pine logs you
    Hope to light,
     
    Faces of smoke
    That drift long and thin,
    Long after pine needles
    Have extinguished,
    Long after you have gone to bed.

    July 25, 2012

  • Zippo by Judith Slater

    Please enjoy this exceptional poem by Judith Slater. Happy Monday everyone!

    American Life in Poetry: Column 383
    BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006
    Sometimes, when we are children, someone or something suddenly throws open a window and
    the world of adults pours in. And we never quite get over it. Here’s a poem about an experience
    like that by Judith Slater, who lives in New York.

    Zippo
    I didn’t think handsome then, I thought
    my father the way he saunters down Main Street,
    housewives, shopkeepers, mechanics calling out,
    children running up to get Lifesavers. The way
    he pauses to chat, flipping his lighter open,
    tamping the Lucky Strike on his thumbnail.

    I sneak into his den when he’s out, tuck
    into the kneehole of his desk and sniff
    his Zippo until dizzy, emboldened;
    then play little tricks, mixing red and black
    inks in his fountain pen, twisting together
    paperclips. If I lift the telephone receiver

    quietly, I can listen in on our party line.
    That’s how I hear two women
    talking about him. That’s why my mother
    finds me that night sleepwalking, sobbing.
    “It’s all right,” she tells me,
    “you had a nightmare, come to bed.”

    American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org),
    publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of
    Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2011 by Judith Slater from her most recent book of poems, “The Wind Turning Pages,” Outriders Poetry Project, 2011. Poem reprinted by permission of Judith Slater and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2012 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004- 2006. We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.


    American Life in Poetry ©2006 The Poetry Foundation
    Contact: alp@poetryfoundation.org
    This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.

    July 23, 2012

  • The Weight (haiku)

    lie down in flowers,
    how your body is now the weight
    of dirt blocking sun.
    July 19, 2012

  • Burial Rites on White Island Volcano (haibun)

    The way the sulfur burns our throats on this molten prison
    This smoking island “it can’t possibly be worth it” digging
    Yellow neon sweating rock – but oh how on some sun-filled days
    The deep water around us seems gentle and free and how the birds
    May have returned to say goodnight as we settle in, bones aching
    From hard labor, our feet covered in volcanic dust, our nostrils
    Burnt with the sulfur, oh it is ungodly quiet when we settle in to sleep,
    It is quiet when the lahars bury us at sea….

    End of days foretold
    swiftly the darkness becomes
    a light to walk towards.

    [written about the the White Island volcano in New Zealand: “Attempts were made in the mid 1880s, 1898–1901 and 1913-1914 to mine sulphur from White Island but the last of these came to a halt in September 1914, when part of the western crater rim collapsed, creating a lahar which killed all 10 workers. They disappeared without trace, and only a camp cat survived.”]

    July 17, 2012

  • The Promise by Jane Hirshfield

    Absolutely beautiful poem featured today on American Life in Poetry. I enjoyed immensely and am excited to share it with you!

    American Life in Poetry: Column 382
    BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006
    Jane Hirshfield, who lives in the San Francisco Bay area, is one of our country’s finest poets, and
    I have never seen a poem of hers that I didn’t admire. Here’s a fine one that I see as being about
    our inability to control the world beyond us.

    The Promise

    Stay, I said
    to the cut flowers.
    They bowed
    their heads lower.

    Stay, I said to the spider,
    who fled.

    Stay, leaf.
    It reddened,
    embarrassed for me and itself.
    Stay, I said to my body.

    It sat as a dog does,
    obedient for a moment,
    soon starting to tremble.

    Stay, to the earth
    of riverine valley meadows,
    of fossiled escarpments,
    of limestone and sandstone.
    It looked back
    with a changing expression, in silence.

    Stay, I said to my loves.
    Each answered,
    Always.

    American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org),
    publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of
    Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2011 by Jane Hirshfield, from her most recent book of poems,
    Come, Thief, Alfred A. Knopf, 2011. Poem reprinted by permission of Jane Hirshfield and the publisher. Introduction copyright 2012 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.


    American Life in Poetry ©2006 The Poetry Foundation
    Contact: alp@poetryfoundation.org
    This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.

    July 16, 2012

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