Sunday, June 29, 2025

Wano

 Landon more in a state of shock after the nose piercing. It is considered a high honor and forever identifies Landon with this Wano tribe in the high mountains of Papua, New Guinea.




Queen of Lodi

Then landed Pashtun

Queen of the Lodi race

Ancient alien beings

Fluent in the Dari dialect

To serve man their message


Didn't matter, fried or baked.

 White Springs

Baptist Sing

Virginia Williams and Paul Beauchamp 



To have the mark of grace

The one unlovely embrace

Blind to measuring their worth

Decreasing in self always first

Humility present unknowing

Love for others growing.

In day present past


In days present past

John Clare Stokes


We thought our works would last

The bold colors so lovingly applied

But oh how the hues did subside 

to white canvas of a double coated past. 

No honor


 Coffee tabled 


It was interesting, I took a copy down for the relatives to see the photographs and story, how one, even with me opening to the page of the story, had no interest, and said, I’ll look later. 

Goes to show, a photographer is not even a photographer among his own, or something to that affect. You can lead a donkey to water but he has to drink? Don’t show your prints before three glasses of wine?

Saturday, June 28, 2025

Cloud concert


 Glenn Cumulus plays the five string line

Daliwood


 Staying Stoked in Daliwood


And what shall we create today?

Or shall we just scroll the day away?

Get off that lard laden posterior 

Form a band and rank a superior!

Beneath the stucco fence


 Beneath the stucco fence 

John Clare Stokes


In innocence where once they leaned

to steal their first kiss deep beneath

their feet a rumbling earth gave rise to

coal to warm the homes upon the steep

holler steps the old Orander buses rusting

beside the narrow road that carried the

fathers and the brothers far within the

Crumpler mountains returning to the shrill

whistle of  miners shifts ending,  unrecognizable covered in coal dust

a mass of one shuffling men all laboring

below while above in white snow lingered

two near the stucco fence that kept them

separated daring never to cross for 

Ethel saw it all from her upstairs room

the daily coming and the going of who

was returning from Northfork and who was

going to Bluefield even down to hearing

the soft purring in the cellar dank, lapping

the milk stolen from the ice box while

Ethel ironed the bus mans clothes over

looking the first generation of the Italian

family in search of a dream within the

coal seams and steal perchance their

own first kiss to start a family living in

the yellow company home and if by hard

labor they gathered enough script they

too could move up the Mountain into a

house of blue where from their up stairs

windows they could count the coming and

the going who was meeting who by the

yellow stucco fences below to steal their

daughters away, far away from the 

separation of their fences, of the

rumblings deep beneath their trembling feet.


The entrance to my mother’s childhood home in Crumpler, West Virginia. Mamma told of her first beau, a young Italian lad.

Men of steel


 Men of Steel 

John Clare Stokes


by night the broken men 

would sip within the cemetery

of Mann atop the hill overlooking

the dying town where once the

coal they said would never end 

lamenting or celebrating

we never knew

we only knew that they were

up there

like the ravens in the trees

leaving their droppings

too poor to be buried atop

the cemetery of Mann

moving on come the dawn

into the hills and the hollers

living off the welfare dollars

high above the dying town.


On a hill in Bluefield, West Virginia is the Mann family cemetery where derelicts like the drink.

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Magic lily


 A magic lily

A fairy lily

A rain lily

Atamasco lily

Johnny Appleseed


Legend has it Johnny Appleseed

went about spreading seed

others tell of a Bouquet Boy

Who went about gathering joy.


Psalm 97:11 


Johnny went about the land

Spreading beauty for all to see

We just couldn’t understand

How beauty sprang from the ugly

Last Wednesday


 Last Wednesday 

Johnclarestokes 


What were you doing on 

your last Wednesday fifty-four

years ago?

Did you spend most of the day

under the pecan out front,

in the stationary conversation chair

with the broken back?

Did you piddle in your garden

beside the out house?

Were you by yourself most of the day

with Bernice at the school lunchroom?

Did the sons William, Billy or Jimmy come by?

What of daughter Mary? 

Did Luke, Curtis or Marzell call or write?

Irene or Hazel, your first daughters by your Ethel Marie

So pretty she was

Did they come from Forest to visit?

What about the Methodist pastor across the street?

Did he wave to you on his way to mid week 

services?

Were there warning pains you just chalked up

to a hard Homewood, Mississippi life?

I was only fourteen in Williston, Florida

I would have taken the Trailways out to visit you

Like we used to do

Had I known it was going to your last 

Wednesday.