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Poetry by JC Snyder

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  • the purple flower

    if you should
    in the trudge of
    a Friday commute
    come across a purple flower
    think of your relatives
    and smile.

    June 24, 2011

  • precious

    look
    we all have our own precious
    we hold it
    carefully,
    carefully

    someday
    we will let this slip
    effortless as liquid
    away,
    away.

    June 24, 2011

  • leather

    that cool sensation
    skin has
    against bare skin
    plush softness
    or taut tan
    the feeling
    knows only one thing –
    hold on
    don’t let go.

    June 22, 2011

  • doll baby (haiku)

    i am your doll
    baby you can dress me –
    posed poised and waiting.

    June 21, 2011

  • florescent light

    florescent light
    oh the longer i stare at you

    the more the cubicles in front me
    pulse
    and jive

         does anyone else
         feel that they’ve already died?

    floating above it all
    like a florescent light

    incandescent orbit
    of an out of body zealot
    reticent under duress.

    June 17, 2011

  • 400 posts! 400 poems!

    i’ve hit 400. who would ever have thought – wonder how high the count will go…. i guess as long as you readers keep reading, i’ll keep writing!

    some good “remember when” types…

    Remembering Spring Break 2002

    Benson’s Market Then and Now

    The Goodbye Party (John Macky of the Old Baltimore Colts)

    Feel Alive

    …and in the spirit of remember… remember to leave me comments when the mood strikes! thank your all!

    June 17, 2011

  • what it feels like to be sick

    my eyelids become
    yellow walls,
    tiny swirls of paper peeling
    at the corners
    pasted so many years ago

    each effort
    to open them
    brings me closer to the hardwood

    floor

    as i fall
    the red bowl on the coffee table
    swallows me down
    with a smirk.

    June 16, 2011

  • where children live (alice b. johnson)

    This is the house where shades
    Are never straight,
    And children swing upon
    A broken gate,
    Whose groans beneath the weight
    Of bodies, three,
    Are lost in childish shouts
    Of wildest glee.

    When autumn comes to call,
    And summer’s gone,
    Then piles of dusty leaves
    Lie on the lawn,
    While parked against the steps
    A bat and bike,
    And all the countless things
    That children like.

    I’ve often seen the folk
    Who pass this way,
    Raise eyes and noses high
    As if to say,
    “This sort of place is just
    No earthly good,
    It spoils the looks of all
    The neighborhood.”

    The house may look a wreck,
    The yard forlorn,
    The awnings on the porch
    Be sadly torn,
    But if folk should become
    Inquisitive,
    Just say, “This is the house
    Where children live.”

    ~title poem from Where Children Live by my great-grandmother Alice B. Johnson

    June 14, 2011

  • to be quiet with (haiku)

    love that man to be
    quiet with; that man who can
    understand silence.

    June 13, 2011

  • untitled 100 (heat makes the city old)

    and the city
    becomes immersed in
    a heat that
    steams hair to curls
    settles in with
    one heavy
    harumph, such
    a grumpy old man
    his joints
    reacting
    instinctively
    to oppressive air
    with a crackle.

    June 10, 2011

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