Thursday, October 3, 2024

To the unknown


 To the unknown
John Clare Stokes


There was speculation 

Of who it could have been

The burying

In the night

There was talk of

Exhuming the unknown

To determine 

Who it may have been

But in the end

A marker was placed

The unknown 

Just wanted to die

Without a trace.

Pool of life


 Pool of life
John Clare Stokes


Poetry

He tried

It died

Bad sonnets

Weren't in vogue


Photography 

He tried

Beautiful

Was the only

Reply

Just couldn't

Get beyond


Politics

He tried

So right in

A wrong world

No one voted

Not even he


Painting

He tried

The palette

Of colors

Didn't match anyone's 

Decor


Then the pastor

Said he must

Decrease 

That was simply

Easy

After all the

Trying

Sad Smoke


 Sad Smoke

John Clare Stokes


Whatever came of our little lad

Whenever we made a fire outside

He was always there by our side

His pitch fork stabbing the pine straw

Watching the white smoke

Happily consuming it all.

This evening we burned a pine pile

On the hill

It was a good day with an 

Autumn chill

But something was amiss 

With the fire

It kept wafting low toward

The back porch door

Searching we were sure 

For the little boy

As so I finally stuck his pitch fork

Next to mine

On the hill

And for the moment

Lured the sad smoke back.

Two at Norfolk


 Two at Norfolk

Wallace Stevens


Mow the grass in the cemetery, darkies,

Study the symbols and the requiescats,

But leave a bed beneath the myrtles.

This skeleton had a daughter and that, a son.


In his time, this one had little to speak of,

The softest word went gurrituck in his skull.

For him the moon was always in Scandinavia 

And his daughter was a foreign thing.


And that one was never a man of heart.

The making of his son was one more duty.

When the music of the boy fell like a fountain,

He praised Johann Sebastian, as he should.


The dark shadows of the funereal magnolias 

Are full of the songs of Jamanda and Carlotta;

The son and the daughter, who come to the darkness,

He for her burning breast and she for his arms.


And these two never meet in the air so full of

Summer 

And touch each other, even touching closely,

Without an escape in the lapses of their kisses.

Make a bed and leave the iris in it.

Between the lines


 Between the lines
John Clare Stokes


Once there was the time

When in our dairies written

A pain far beyond crying

Of secret lovers so smitten


I’ve read of the special recipes

Who the Sunday guests were

But ne’er the heart kept secret

The preachers wife framed perfectly


But I could read between her lines

For I too kept the heart hidden

Two souls of the poetic mind

The deepest pain of love n’er written


And now the words are sealed

What’s written as a language foreign

Only in eternity to be revealed

The deepest love right in the open

Revealed between the lines.

Orange Hill Hymn


 Orange Hill Hymn

John Clare Stokes


Today the tree that moves me is atop Orange Hill Cemetery in Williston, Fla, place where so many of my loved ones and friends rest from their battles, their struggles, their quest to find the light amid their darkness.

The poem is dedicated to our common battle.

Does a new day bring light?

Has the light swallowed the dark?

Come day a squint into bright

The beams still painfully sharp.


On goes the gauze again

In streams the soothing dark

Not ready to walk in gleams

of light beams deadly sharp.


Many meant for the night

Few called to walk wide waking

Freed from the terrible fright

Always giving, never once taking.


In countless wards the halt

The little wars raging on

Light brigades assault for naught

the darkness ever so strong.


Allured to the prospect of sight

We wave the truce flag and stare

into the blinding beams of night

as captured we fall into the lair.


Hand on shoulder on shoulder on

the line of the lame snakes along

Til all glimmers are finally gone

No one remaining to recall home.


And on the Orange Hill quiet

Faint songs from old hymns

A remnant chants into the night

Pulls the weeds and remembers

Pearl and all of them

Awaiting.

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Through the Cobalt


Through the cobalt 

Splendidly

John Clare Stokes


My father and his fellow preacher friend Josh

they loved to spend time in abandoned places

old homestead burn piles

digging about for buried treasure

They were both taken with the cobalt blue

depression glass

even the blue noxzema jars

and it lined the window sills of his old place

to give off an other worldly view of this 

old world when looking through the cobalt.

When I happened upon the cobalt jars

in the shakers window

They too must have caught the desire to dig for

the cobalt blue. 

I peered in and saw Josh and Luther Ray

in the Wakulla woods again.

Paths back


 Paths back

John Clare Stokes


In the entering of the path back

One recalls the time of beginning

When extending it seemed such

The never ending journey.

Who will block for me?


 In the sweet bye


This past December Roscoe and I traveled down to Williston, Raleigh to be exact, to get some seed cane from Jack Whitehurst. Jack along with his twin brother Bill and sister Harriet were the first people we met when we rolled in from Wilmore, Kentucky that June day in 1967. They had brought us watermelons to welcome us as the Preacher family of the First United Methodist Church. I told mamma that day, there are two men at the door. When I learned they were in my class of 1973, I kind of was concerned for my diminutive size. Their size later that year turned to my benefit when they opened wide gaps for the number 40 halfback to make long hauls on the JV football team.

Those were such great years with Pappy Whitehurst and my father being such friends, along with Elliot, Bill and Dan and their children.

I loaded the cane that day and looked forward to this November returning to Williston where Jack hoped to cook his own syrup, at least building a shed for the kettle and setting up the mill. I had last year finally set up my fathers Goldens Mill and had planned to squeeze the juice and take it down to add. 

Saturday I was in Williston for the funeral of a family friend Tommy Brazeal and I sat by Jacks brother Bill and wife Cindie. 

He said he’d tell Jack he saw me and would let me know where the cooking was taking place.

Today Bill messaged me to say Jack passed away that same Saturday around 6pm.

The cane is now all the more special than before, as is the bottle of syrup he and Charlene gave me. 

In the sweet bye and bye

We shall meet by that beautiful gold cooking.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

October by Robert Frost


 O hushed October morning mild,

Thy leaves have ripened to the fall;
Tomorrow’s wind, if it be wild,
Should waste them all.
The crows above the forest call;
Tomorrow they may form and go.
O hushed October morning mild,
Begin the hours of this day slow.
Make the day seem to us less brief.
Hearts not averse to being beguiled,
Beguile us in the way you know.
Release one leaf at break of day;
At noon release another leaf;
One from our trees, one far away.
Retard the sun with gentle mist;
Enchant the land with amethyst.
Slow, slow!
For the grapes’ sake, if they were all,
Whose leaves already are burnt with frost,
Whose clustered fruit must else be lost—
For the grapes’ sake along the wall.

Ode to the fallen oaks


 Ode to the fallen oaks

John Clare Stokes


In the passing of the oak....From afar who did come....And in hushed manner who spoke....Of what he succomed....In the passing of the day....Does the sun not miss....The shadow and the sway.....The meeting with the mist....In the passing of the time....With longing who will recall....The old oak so fine....And the terrible fall.

The Wild Child


 Wild Child

John Clare Stokes 

After Yeats the Stolen Child 


By the bank beneath the broken sign

By the boat beside the fishing dock

There ran the wild child by the shore

The wild child that mother forgot


By the lodge lounging at the bar

By the downing of another shot

There ran the wild child by the door

The wild child that father forgot


By the asphalt cracked unmarked

By the dumpster beside this lot  

There ran the wild child by the parked

The wild child that brother forgot 


By the time we called out for her

By the time she left our spot 

There ran the wild child but a blur 

The wild child that sister forgot.


By the tree stand by the Range

By the trail the creature was shot

There ran the wild child deranged

The wild child we all forgot.