Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Bluefield


 There are places I remember


My mother’s parents home in Bluefield, West Virginia at the base of the East River Mountain on Cumberland Road. It was moved several years ago for a road widening across the highway. Fond memories of picking cherries out front, gathering raspberries on the hill behind the house. Playing in the basement, my sister cooking on Mamma’s little play stove that actually worked. Playing football with the Thompson twins across the road, going to the Danleys dairy next door, catching lightening bugs in the lush grass, seeing my cousins Donna Lynn Puckett and David Orander. Great days!

Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Faith in Frosty


 Frosty 

john clare


the day we placed our

faith in Frosty 

little Bobby asked for a sober mommy

pretty Ann for a warm home

Johnny not to feel so alone

Jane just for easing granny's pain

Paul for a family not foster again

they came one by one

sticking on their dreams

sad to stick one's faith

on temporal,frozen things

but what are the children to do?

When the God of snowflakes

is replaced

by a melting man

soon the birds to drink again?

In turn


 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.

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

Nancy


 With Nancy


Can you imagine

Holding her D850

With the 500mm f4

With the tc1.4lll

Looking at Jaguars

From a boat in Brazil

She would say

John

Hand to me the Nikon 

And I would

And I’d then say

Nancy

When go we to 

Costa Rica

And Nancy would reply

Soon John

But first

You must stay and

Hand the Nikon to me

Yes Nancy 

I see

John would blithely reply.


A play upon Nancy Elwood the photographer who is in Brazil now and soon venturing to Costa Rica with said equipment sans me.

Scarlet


 Scarlet 

John Clare Stokes 


Once the every thought

in the Indian Wars

was upon the Price Creek

mistress

the red haired one upon 

the prancing horse

years went by and the

Vivid red fades to rust

in the dusk at Price Creek

the sound of hooves

as the old soldier stirs.

A foggy concept


 A foggy concept 


We photographers work our fields of view

The same as the farmers do

Here a filter, there a stack or two 

In hopes of yielding a harvest for you.

Turn, turn


 The sweet cane from a far country

Jeremiah 6:20


For everything turn,turn

A time to plant cane

A time to grind cane

A time to taste sweet cane

A time to dream of cane

For everything turn, turn

Mutt sues


 Mutt goes to Pet Snarky

They refuse to acknowledge Mutt’s pedigree 

Mutt secures a Mutt attorney 

Mutt attorney settles with amends

Now Mutt rides in Mercedes Benz.

Lora Law


 Of Grace and rat snakes

John Clare Stokes


Lora Law when she was small

Would spend her summers with

Granny Grace in the country

Lora Law was deathly afraid

Of anything that slithered or

Made a hissing sound

And would run crying inside

To Granny Grace quietly 

Rocking watching

She tried to show Lora Law

From the old family bible

How Jesus had removed

The enmity on the cross

How he was the serpent

Lifted up to look to Him

And live

But it never sank in

And Lora Law went on to

Have children 

And by then Granny Grace

Was in glory

And they ran screaming 

Inside 

Upon seeing the 

poor old rat snake

That lived quietly

In the shed

Until Lora Law

Sent poor Paul in

With a spade.

Sunday, August 10, 2025

Below the watery line


from below the watery line...I beheld the long train...bumping together...waltzing for joy....spinning out of control...then along came the dugong minstrel aqua men....singing with the water monkey's....deeply they sang....their cymbals clanging merrily...the song of Ichetucknee. 

A shoal flower

 Upon the sandy shoal...a flower was prepared...magnificent in her glory.... when I returned to pick it for thee....it was already  claimed by the Suwannee.