Wednesday, August 21, 2024
First Marriage
"Mr Roussey, it's your daughter Helen's hand I ask. You see, we sat beside one another all year long. We plan to live in Sopchoppy in the play house out back. John Lloyd is going to be our best man, and her sister Dawn the maid of honor. We plan on inviting our teacher Mrs Townsend. We learned so much from her in second grade. I've yet to break the news to Debbie McKenzie, maybe Daniel her brother will break it to her gently. My daddy, the preacher at Sopchoppy and Crawfordville Methodist circuit we will ask to do the wedding ceremony. We hope Nena and Randy Anderson will sing. We have arranged for my Uncle Jimmy from Mississippi to pick Helen up in Panacea, drive her over to meet the family. He’s just of age to drive daddy’s DeSoto. I have an older sister Paula, she is best friends with Joan Sanders, Jackie Lawhorn and Henry McDonald. We have a dog named Bobo and my mom Clara teaches the fourth grade at Sopchoppy Elementary, so you see, I hope you agree with the plans we have made and by third grade we can marry in August when Jimmy and his brothers and sister comes for the summer. Sincerely, John Clare Stokes.
After Ansel
Moonset Tabor
Influences. Another photograph of Ansel Adams I’ve long admired is Moonrise Hernandez. We carry these images in our memory and when we come upon similar scenes, while we do not copy him, we honor him.
Mt Tabor AME
1866
Columbia County
iPhone
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Fairy Tales
[Fairy Tales] make rivers run with wine only to make us remember, for one wild moment, that they run with water. GK Chesterson
The new cards printed from Vista.
Slip Away
Slip away
John Clare Stokes
Loud
Once so loud
Her every word
Heard
Across the holler
Fast
Once so fast
Her every move
Fast
At speed of holler
Strong
Once so strong
Her every lift
Strong
Above all others
Weak
Now so weak
Her every turn
Weak
Pain in every thing
Quiet
Now so quiet
Her every whisper
Quiet
Faintly heard
Slip
Now slip away
Her every intention
Slipping
Away from us
Align
Align
The last time
All was aligned
I was merely
Fifteen
In love with
Pam or Melissa
But really eying
Another secretly
For Eddies took
Both of them
Leaving me empty
And now I'm
Past sixty by two
And I still think of
Pam and Melissa
And secretly
Even think of
How empty I still feel
Even with one Eddie dying
And the other
Probably still trying
To eclipse my secret love.
Allen Cole
Allen
Mechanic excellent, patriot, veteran, philosopher, all around good guy, no motorcycle accident can keep him down. The prosthetic leg will arrive in a few weeks. He will again be on his feet. We anxiously await the return.
Allen did return but on this birthday several years ago he and his son Ethan took a ride down I-95. Up ahead was a wreck, Allen slowed and swerved to the right out of the way. Behind came a van and hit him from behind. Ethan got there sadly to hold his dying father in his arms.
Allen was the one who gave me the nickname Magoo.
Tulip
I knew a man
He loathed tulips
Not sure why
Something about a guy called Calvin
Growing them
I’d offer him a lily
But probably not
For their call to bloom
Is irresistible too
Never tell
I tell
It was of no avail
They could not tell
Swallowtail
Spicebush
from
Swallowtail
Palamedes
from
Swallowtail
Giant
I’ll never tell
Palamedes Swallowtail on tropical milkweed
The Swimmer
Needmore
A short story after the John Cheever story The Swimmer
johnClare stokes
We cannot fathom the reasons men do the things we do. Why we climb oxygen-starved peaks, dive into Floridian light starved caves with our oxygen upon our backs. There is ever the thought, I need more out of life. In the case of James Cash Strickland, he simply found himself on Highway 94 beside the Tom's Creek Bridge, less than a mile out of Needmore in Echols County, Georgia.
It was on that day, approximately ten on the May morning, James Cash decided, "I shall swim to the Gulf of Mexico." James was not a particularly adept swimmer, he had a pool which he cleaned daily, but rarely entered. It was one of those painful lingering memories of children now grown and gone.
He had planned a two day kayak trip down the Tom's, entering the Suwannee River just across the Georgia border in Columbia County, journeying on to his take out point at the Highway 6 bridge. As he stood with his kayak and gear, his friend Steve from White Springs having already left with his car, leaving it at the six bridge on the Hamilton County side, he pondered. He thought of this river, the years he had spent upon it, how it was the dividing of two nations, the Timucua to the east, the Apalachee to the west. Guasaca Esqui they called it, River of Reeds. Years later in 1528 Narvaez would see it, in 1539 DeSoto would cross this River of the Deer, or San Juanee, Little St John's, in search of gold.
We do not know what led James Cash of leave the kayak beneath a tupelo tree off Highway 94 as he entered the water that morning. All he knew was a certain freedom felt, the need for more out of life taking on new meaning.
He mostly did a freestyle dog paddling kick as he was accustomed to in his pool down the narrow Tom. He eventually found his rhythm as he passed the Woodpecker route, the only bridge he would see until Road 6 and the car awaiting. The upper Suwannee was a grand swim, the water in the mythic river this time of year low enough from lack of rain that the current was not too swift, making the narrow channel a joy to swim.
The sound of the bees busy above in the tupelo trees was intoxicating and it only gave him strength to continue on. The fisherman at the Six bridge were totally fascinated to see a boat-less person making his way down stream. Like most folk in these parts though, they did not meddle into his mission and did not question when he walked over to his vehicle and left the note on the windshield and the keys on the driver side tire. "Swimming to the Gulf. Need More." James Cash.
He slipped quietly into the tannic below the fishers who never saw him, assuming him to be somewhere in the woods camping.
The river between bridge six and the old Cone bridge, named for the former Governor from Benton was lined with tupelo and cypress, a very familiar part of his journey. He recognized many of the bends and banks he had once paddled to, the old Prospect Primitive landing, Turner Bridge, Roline and the Limp Dick bend where he and his two boys used to camp up on the high sand bar.
He wondered as he continued on, if his friend Johnny wasn't somewhere near, writing about the river he too loved, still happy to be among the number one more day. He thought of following the trail through the palmetto and inviting him to come, but he had an unction, a need more to continue on without haste if you will.
Big Shoals was a thrill to shoot through. With low water, it was a raging Class 3 rapid. He knew how to safely make his way through the sharp limestone rocks hidden by doing a crab walk over them, hold high his tail bone. He had learned this years ago in a canoe class taken at the "communistic" junior college over in Gainesville.
Past the Shoals, he heard the Robinson branch falls back up in the woods a bit but he was more concerned with the large alligator he knew long dwelt on the Hamilton County side above Bell Springs. He kept to the Columbia or Timucua side as he quietly floated by the sleeping gator on the bank. Fortunately he never saw the swimmer.
The river was growing wider below the Shoals with steep, high banks and pine forests spilling right up to the waterline. He could hear the sound of traffic ahead as he went through little shoals to pass under the CSX and 41 bridge out from White Springs. He recalled the largest moccasin he had ever encountered as he once stepped over a log on the bank. He swam on to the sounds of the clarion tower bells of the Stephen Foster Memorial Park playing Foster songs, forever bringing more fame to the little St Johns, by naming it Swanee to fit his Old Folks at home song. He did some backstrokes under the 136 bridge, looking up at the Sophie Adams home by the bridge, then the Springhouse, once a thriving mecca for tourists. He was loathe to leave such familiar stretches of river, sections made immortal by the many poets and artists, including Theron Gaulding, the painter who thought so much of the river he had his ashes spread upon them.
As the bells of Foster faded, the river took him westward where it made the big bend before dipping downward toward Ellaville at the Suwannee River State Park. Ellaville, once a large sawmill owned by another Governor, George Drew, was named for Ella, an old negro woman in the Governor's employ.
He passed under the US90 bridge, then the noisy Interstate 10 dual bridges. He thought of the many travelers speeding past above, rushing East and West. He did not give it much thought, He only knew his need for more and he was heading South. By Dowling Park and the 'old folks at home' home, he was beginning to take on less the appearance of ;man and more fish, Sturgeon to be more accurate. He was no longer led by the nagging cravings that once so ruled him; need to eat, need to sleep, need to possess, need to chase. No, like the Sturgeon who would annually migrate up the river to spawn, James Cash was in a reverse spawn. Sixty years of living had come to this. It was all he had to show for. It drew him on, the journey from Needmore to need more.
The mid part of the river from Little River Springs on down to Fannin' Springs was a spring hopping nirvana: Turtle, Fletcher, Rock Bluff, Sun, Hart, Otter and a myriad of lesser known clear, cool paradises flowing into the wine-colored waters. James loved the rush of cool each spring gave and infused new energy into him.
By now the river was wide and the boats many. He was like the manatee, in danger of a prop cutting his white flesh to shreds.
The water past the Dixie County bridge at Fannin' was growing brackish. By Fowler's Bluff, the site of the pirate Black Beards sailing to bury treasure, the river was tidal with the Sturgeon and mullet jumping. He was no longer interested in any treasure from Black Beard or gold from DeSoto. Passing Hog Island, the many channels were confusing and one not familiar could easily become lost. Fortunately, he knew the way to the Gulf. He passed the charter boats coming in, heading toward Suwannee and other ports of showing their catches. He did not need to follow the buoys or channel markers out.
It had been a long, two-hundred fifteen mile serpentine swim.
His skin was white and leathery as a Sturgeon. He was at the end of the journey.
Never again in this life would he ever see Needmore.
Monday, August 19, 2024
Almost heaven
Below East River
In the long ago journey to Bluefield
We would know our journey was ending
As we neared the East River Mountain tunnel
Going beneath the hills of Virginia
Opening into the mountains of West Virginia
Where we'd stop at the Blue Ridge station
To ride the little Red Ridge Runner train
Peering over the cliff to see grandmothers
Home on Cumberland road below
Impatiently taking the last switchbacks down
Into the town of Bluefield
To point out the familiar landmarks
St Luke's where two were born
The telephone station where another worked
Castlebury where another lived
Pulling up into the steep drive
Across from the dairy and the twins
Parking behind Monnies Black Buick
Beside Uncle Kermit's just introduced
Mustang
For he was a Ford salesman
And we'd look up upon hearing the
Ridge Runner high above us
It's whistle telling us
Another family had made it under
The East River Mountain
And too would soon be home
Looking up from their side of
Almost heaven.
New life in Angie
My brother recently got a divorce and has not looked back. It is what it is but it is a lesson to me to not let your first love slip away. Could his first marriage been saved? Possibly. Could Angie’s? Possibly.
Moot point. If you aren’t meant it gets tough when you go on and on in it. He should have gotten out before the kids.
Hindsight is always clear.











