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Jay Esse Jan 2016
Her eyes glistened like granules of sugar under bright light
Her hair flowed softly like warm chocolate might
Her skin was like toffee, though when I dared take a bite
It was for times much sweeter than she.

Her heart shined like gold foil I hadn't yet unwrapped
Her touch lulled like syrup and I soon became trapped
Her words first candy-coated but those quickly were scrapped
It was for times much sweeter than she.

Her cares became much sourer than I wanted to taste
Her sweetness grew moldy and she tossed it with haste
Her love frosted over and she lay it to waste
It was for times much sweeter than she.
yes, yet another love poem amongst the rest. whatever
Jay Esse Jul 2015
I hope your kisses taste of sunshine
and pelt my skin like rain
I hope your embrace feels of summertime
and scorches winter's pain
I hope your spirit looks of firelight
and tosses on the wind
I hope your love envelops me
and that it chases 'til the end.
Jay Esse May 2014
stifling a yawn, hair in curled knots
my mouth tastes of ocean with a little less salt
each pin dropped like a shout
with curtains drawn I'm blind

extended limbs, muscles ache
any movement causes comfort to break
still there's ruckus about
yet silence I aught to find

eyes blurred, words slurred
brain full of cotton feeling it's about to burst
but nothing would come out
because nothing is on my mind.
Jay Esse Jan 2014
love
to sufferers of
scarcity
consider it
embodied in
a soul-mate
one for
one

whole split
yet aggregate
two
halves per
simplistic
two-dimensional
singular
somehow minded
to be
complete?

stretch out
blinded horizons
for everything
to see
is actually
a
part of
an infinitely
dimensional
infinite
part of
me
Jay Esse Dec 2013
Let me show you to that burrowed house
up on the hill, it's ages old!
Come, let us shuffle through its memories
and see what is to unfold.

Faded are the shingles
with windows yellowed and stale,
through overexposure to the sun
all of the paint is flecked and pale.

Tattered is the rosy wallpaper
stained are the wooden floors,
and all of the hardened, crusty carpets
are discolored with ancient molds.

Winds howl through the hallways
yet are too damp in the midst of heat,
not to mention winters' frigidness seeping in
not one table can stand, their legs too weak.

Grass has sprung up through the floorboards
pipes are rusted and they leak.
Every bulb is dead, the curtains are shreds;
both groupings are now just clouded and meek.

But glance upon these remains once more,
see what they have to hide-
for not until you know there's gold
would you look for a treasured chest to peek inside.

All lights and curtains are worn down with fingerprints;
these rooms must have been quite used.
Not often such delicacy can be found, seeing
floors and pipes both falling to nature's muse.

Tables' legs are old and tired of standing,
why not let them sit a while?
Yet no matter what weather it shall be exposed to
this home, to its fate, has reconciled.

Carpets all were once soft and
scrunched between our children's toes,
how beatiful these floors and wallpaper must've been.
How beautiful? Only us aged would know.

The paint was once pungently new
it gleamed in softened sunlight,
while the windows acted as doors to dream's ways
and the shingles kept out the night.

Let me show you to that burrowed house
what memories it holds of ours, my dear
Come, lay here with me in this bed we shared
for now, in looking back, we hold no fear.
Jay Esse Dec 2013
numbing silence blankets the senses;

cotton muffles the sound of the

bleached duvet coating the sight of the

dampened clouds melting on tongues to taste the

crisp of the breeze carrying the scent of the

dulled pines weighed down with flakes that caress the

spirit that echoes the sound of the

flickering moon that brings into view the

candle in the window and the taste of the

leftover sweetened sunset from the touch of the

lips of my lover

to mine
Jay Esse Dec 2013
why are most popular and modern poems so serious
life is not always serious
so why must literature be
there are still children's books
and still children's poems
and we still all like childish things
like balloons and cookies and snowmen and Disney movies and bouncy houses
I mean c'mon if you said you've never wanted to watch a Disney movie or jump in a bouncy house
over the age of 12
you're lying and you know it
not all poems are works of art
so why do we treat them like they should be
to be honest, reading about life and death and love can get pretty boring at times
we could all use a break from the usual
so here's a poem
about absolutely nothing at all.
kinda funny how my other poems I've posted on here all happen to be serious AF; but either way sometimes I do get a bit bored reading the same sort of themes over and over again. I had just wanted to change it up a bit.
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