Friday, August 16, 2024

Laurices Station


 Laurice and Luther Ray


When we lived in Sopchoppy in the 50’s and 60’s, Laurice and Floride Roberts Standard Oil Station on the outskirts of town on HWY 319, was one of two places to get gas or have your vehicle or tractor worked on by Johnny B, the black mechanic. The snapshot inserted is of my father, Luther Ray, who passed away in 2011, and Laurice with his dog. Laurice died in 1997 and Floride in 2008.


Someone commented on Old Florida, that the people of Sopchoppy were unfriendly. If so, it’s only because all the people I knew as a boy are buried out in West Florida Cemetery, and all the unfriendly have moved in from Tallahassee.

I think there were few towns like Sopchoppy in the 50’s and 60’s that epitomized Mayberry more.

Mrs Florida


 6 Dickson Street


Home of Florida Morrison Roberts, Sopchoppy, Florida. 1883-1976.


When we lived in Sopchoppy in the late fifties

Early sixties

Mrs Florida was the matron of town

A stalwart in the Methodist Church my father 

pastored.

We spent many Sunday afternoons after church

eating dinner with Mrs Florida, her daughter Inez and her son Bonny Kaslo “BK”, then one of the Florida Supreme Court justices.

When my father would be out of town on a revival, we would stay with Mrs Florida. She would let me play shoe salesman with her button up shoes, trying them on her. Her down feather mattress guest bed was a dream to sleep in.

When Hurricane Dora came through, we stayed at Mrs Roberts, even though our concrete block parsonage was stronger than her wood and tin home.

Mrs Florida corresponded with us in letter up until her death in October of 1976. My father returned to conduct her funeral.

I now have Mrs Florida’s sweet letters and will always, next to Mrs Mary Roberts, who kept me, hold a place in my heart forever.


Thursday, August 15, 2024

In a Turner dream

Through the mystic artistic 


Like a Turner painting we were in

as the mystic sun was blending 

in the electric blues from below

our paddles paintbrushes in

the canvas flow.


 

I quit

 The night I told God... I could do a better job...of running this sphere.... placing the moon here...and the road there....with trees everywhere....and so I got my way....and if I might say....was doing a pretty decent job....till cicadas waking started....and stars began departing....and darkness wasn't regulated...and floods inundated ...and I prayed for day....to tender my resignation of doing a better job than God...



Sunday Road Trip

 Sunday road trip


There we were, like Barney in his first car from Myrt “Hubcaps” Lesh, heading out for Georgia, when having the time of our lives around White Springs, Roscoe decided to become sick as a dog like Gomer and heaved all over the camera on the console. 

Naturally there were no towels in the car, McDonalds was closed to indoor dining, so the Gate bathroom provided enough towels and water to clean up. By this time we were too hungry for Lake Park so at the Jasper intersection of 136, we headed for Zaxby’s in Live Oak. It was still a good trip despite it all, good for Thelma Melanie to get out after being cooped in the last two weeks.



Zebra journey

 Zebra Long-wing


And in my long sitting and pondering 

In alas flittered a zebra long wing

to briefly on its journey drink some zinnia

leaving me pondering my own journey.



Dream of Green


 Forever Yellow Jackets


In the old green hall

Mrs Thompson still calls

The little second grader

Let his inner man out to play

Rues the day

He left the old green hall

Yellow Jacket Fever

John Clare Stokes


In the old green hall

Miss Thompson still calls

the little Sopchoppy second grader

Time for class children 

Longs for the day

the bloody nose at recess 

for Miss Thompson took him

laid him on the counter

and took away the

Yellow Jacket fever.

Second Grade


Margaret Townsend if you are out there

The little boy who had the crush on you

Who moved to Monticello for grade three

He still misses you and ole Sopchoppy

And thanks you for gently teaching him

More to life than his A,B,C's.

Weary

 I grow weary of posting photograghs i try and be more than just pretty and there little intesest. Post and pretty pic or a mug shot and there they go. The poetry is worse. I guess you keep on and damn the lack of intesest.






Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Stairway to heaven


Stairway to haven

Johnclarestokes 


There are stairways in my mind I climb

Places I can yet go time after time

Where once inside I can for a spell reside

By the familiar comfort of place abide

Draw again upon the lessons learned

Give pause to the incessant worldly yearn

Align for the time with the sweet repast

Taste the savory preserves that last

Hear the creaking steps upon heart pine 

Know forever this haven I shall find.


Luther Ray climbs the steps at Pilgrims Rest

And today is his brothers birthday who

yesterday climbed those steps


Monday, August 12, 2024

Listen up


 Listen Up 


I’ve always been the quiet one

Mostly did all the listening 

Knew I wasn’t the smartest one

When it came to conversation 

The world was full of

Those who loved to speak

Continually carrying on

And I would listen

Can’t really say my quiet

Served me well

Still see myself as rather failed

Didn’t obtain wisdom

Certainly not wealth

Not much to show for

Being a listener

Other than

Putting too much down

On paper

Many and One


In Turn


My mother was a teacher. 4th grade mostly. A good teacher. In my biased opinion,  the best ever. For that is what she aspired to be since graduating from Northfork High in West Virginia, and going on to Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky.

There she met my father, attending on the GI Bill

after WW2, sitting in the semi circle, soon to marry by her sophomore year, to become a future preachers wife.

But she never gave up teaching. Every place the preacher was assigned, she was quick in June, the moving month for Methodist ministers, to get on with some school, with precious little time to set up her room by August.

And so she taught, and every where she went, former students would see her, and tell her, she was their favorite teacher. She even, up until her death in October of 2017, was corresponding with a student from her very first class in Kentucky.

She made an impact on so many. 

Enter her son John. He struggled between everyone saying he should become a preacher like his father or a teacher as his mother. He attended Asbury his junior year, with thoughts of graduating and going on to Asbury Seminary across from the semi circle, even finding someone like his mother to hold hands with and take along the journey.

But it wasn’t to be. An F in Spanish crushed his hopes and he returned to Florida, to work at the local hospital in Williston in maintenance and lament. 

It was his father who suggested, why not attend Florida Southern, a Methodist affiliated school, and we can get a discount. So in the summer of ‘77, the preacher-teacher attended summer school, repeating his junior year, his failed class Spanish, making a C.

By now, the artist decided he would teach. He enrolled in the teacher program. In his senior year he was assigned to the new Lake Gibson Junior High for his internship in Art.

His mentor was a Jewish man, quite hostile to Christianity. His students in turn were hostile to art and him. The classes were mostly glorified study halls with breaking up fights. 

When it came time for John to take over his classes, Weinstein was glad just for the respite.

John made a valiant effort. But he determined he was never going to teach again. At least junior high.

And he didn’t. He later turned down his first offer after graduating to teach Art in Monticello, his old best friends dad, Mr Bishop, being the superintendent. 

He got into retail instead. 

Years passed.

One day a letter came. It was from a young man in Daytona named Greg. Turns out Greg was the quiet boy in one of his classes at Lake Gibson, who did so well, especially the stained glass project.

He thanked John and told him he was the best teacher he had in his entire school years.

He wasn’t a preacher.

He wasn’t a teacher.

But he reached one.

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Long Haul


 There Magoo once was, taking the lateral from the QB, i think Fred Doerr, getting the blocks from Bill and Jack Whitehurst, and making another end around long haul for the touchdown. Magoo was fast and seldom caught. That year or two on JV football were some of the bast. I regret not playing varsity opting to concentrate on basketball. Basketball i was good early on but when i ended up the only white boy on the team, my job as point guard was getting the ball up court, breaking the press, passing off and never seeing the ball again.The done lives these last days like Uncle Rico in Napoleon Dynamite, throwing footballs over mountains and lamenting if coach would have put me in we could have gone to state.