Blessing of the migration
Halpatter statue by Ann Optenorth
In Alligator Park
John Clare Stokes
The old upright was a place
Of delight
By the soft glow of night
She would reflect upon
Where she had been
Before the labored breathing
Confined to the home
Each little magnet
A story of a place
Routes she never again
Would trace
But in her cold dreams
She was traveling
Breathing free
John Clare Stokes
Some Sundays
Mostly
I do not want to go
Hear your hollered hallelujah
As if Holier is more than me
Quietly out of that
Spirit
Some Sundays
For an hour
Can we just dwell
Upon the Key of C
Struck softly and tenderly.
John Clare Stokes
Aren’t these the days
When we lament
We shall not make it
Above the ground floor
We want to climb
The stairway to Heaven
But something seems missing
Holding us down
We chalk it up to flesh
To some transaction in Eden
We don’t look to the bleeding
From the basement
Stick figures
I think I was amiss
In the thinking
I’d happened upon
A kindred spirit
John Clare Stokes
I think I’m ivory billed
Heading for extinction
Stick figures dancing
Across your canvas
Perhaps there dwells
Beyond one fully evolved
In the dimension
I dwell in
The Peace of Wild Things
By Wendell Berry
Artist Kari-Lise Alexander
When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.
From Eliza Beth Gaines
The Southern women in homespun array
The hands that mend as they pray
The Southern cause to win the day
John Clare Stokes
Savor when we dreamed of walking
down to the out going tide
finding the first shells waiting
with little ones at our side.
Oleanders
The little boy knew one who longed
for the bouquets from a long gone son
So he went down to the year 1888
To gather some in her longing state.
Oleanders
Vincent Van Gogh
1888
“Paintings have a life of their own that derives from the painters soul.”
John Clare
Do you recall the early times
when you were sort of mine
The day languishing on
awaiting to walk you home
Today to the memory
I ordered some thin mint
Girl Scout cookies
The little wild eyed beauty knew
She saw right through me
To the corner of Lexington and Main
and I didn’t have to explain
It was April in February
Not at Winn Dixie
But Fitches IGA.