Friday, November 21, 2025
The canoeist
The Canoeist
After John Cheever’s short story, The Swimmer
By john stokes
Like revelations that come to sages on exiled islands, it dawned upon him what he must do. He would canoe across the county. That cold November morning that had killed his beloved glories, he pulled the Old Town from the racks. The royalex no longer made, it fell with a rocking to the dirt. It was the sixteen foot Chipewan model,originally bright yellow, now a dull green from multiple spray painted coatings, with a mostly yellow bottom showing through the scrape marks. He had secured the canoe from an abandoned garage, rescuing it from a long forgotten dry docking, giving it new seats and yoke. Heaving it overhead, with the Bending Branches bent wooden paddle lashed to the thwart, purchased by him from funds his few loyal employees raised for him on his sudden Friday April firing, ending nineteen years denying the Golden Rule,he portaged over to Paul's pool, leaf free unlike his, chlorine mists stinging his vision. Like many of his neighbors, he only knew him by first name. He knew he drank beer and talked loudly on his cell phone was about the extent of his knowledge. And he wasn't home. He was glad to exit this unimaginative rectangular pond and portaged his route downhill to Lenvil Dicks pond which spilled over into the Price Creek. He thought of the times he and his estranged son,now in Japan, fished along the banks, and he hurried to exit this area of the stabbing shallows to the cool creek. Once in the shade of this twisted way, he got as far as old Country Club road before having to hurry across, dodging the rapid moving, like a possum on the highway.With thanks given to Buck Hill for digging his series of dikes in the sixties, he at last made his way into the big lake called Alligator, named for the old Seminole chief who once made his home where now the upper crust dwelt along the high side roam.
He paddled with his favorite j-stroke in long pull and twist the wrist turns, able to keep to the left gunnel, tracking a straight line. At the end of Alligator by the Tiger stadium, a creek trickled out which eventually formed Clay Hole Creek, some water yet remaining from the summer falls which flooded some residents,blaming the County. They said in the ancient of days this was once a continual river all the way down to the Itchetucknee. No longer. Forgoing the blame, it was a continual disembark and pull affair. This was one reason he preferred the canoe over the kayak. The getting in and out. With a long series of repeats, he entered Rose Creek, which he transversed west, taking the right fork at 133 to the headwaters. He was near High Falls, though he never found a fall, surmising there was once a fall long ago or perhaps it was a hippy hangout. His longest portage faced him as he crossed hayfield and bogs below Lulu to Olustee Creek, which designated the lower border of his county. A deeper tannic color, his only obstacles were the many fallen trees replete with hornet nests and banana spiders. It was an arduous paddle, which tested his resolve, but he was too far southward to turn back. And if to add insult to his misery, when he finally made it to O'Leno Park, the stream abruptly went underground in a whirlpool. Another long portage through swamps of moccasin and ticks loomed. When the river appeared again at River Rise, he was now on the clear Santa Fe, a wide, navigable dream of a river. It made the long series of hardships worth the journey. From then on, it was a joy to float along, tracing the southernmost contours and bends, padding past July Spring, Hollingsworth bluff, Wilson Springs and finally to the point where the Itchetucknee's clear water met the Santa Fe tea. Though nearing sixty, a washed up shell of his former vigor, he knew his journey across county was complete. But even in his weakened, near delirious state, he was loathe to call it quits. He was tired of calling it quit, of having others call it quit for him on Friday's! No, this day he would call the quits, he would find a worth far beyond the arbitrary worthlessness placed upon him.
So on that cold and uneventful Friday in November, with the memory of his wilted morning glories still stinging, the Canoeist continued on for the Suwannee. He would make the Gulf eventually, his once Popeye like left forearm turning the J-stroke into the current.
Mrs Florida
Mrs Florida
My earliest and richest memories to this day reside in Sopchoppy, my first eight years in Florida. We spent many Sundays at Mrs Florida Morrison Roberts(1883-1976) home with her son Bonny Kaslo”BK”, (1907-1999)Florida Supreme Court Justice and his sister Inez Yent(1902-1993)wife of Florida Attorney General. I was most fortunate to have many matronly mothers in my early life. Mrs Florida’s , husband,Thomas(1877-1949) was the railroad clerk and merchant. They married in 1899. I would get out her button up shoes and try them on her, pretending I was a salesman. She had a feather down mattress on which I slept. Mamma and Paula and I would go to her house and stay during hurricanes, though her wooden cracker house was less sturdy than our concrete block house. She kept up writing to us up until her death.
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
Molten blue
Molten blue
Through a dream of
Molten stream
Green Mohawk
Desiring liquid blue
Venturing through
Awakening waves
Carrying well past
Mere shore bound days.
Mohawk malaise
Mohawk Malaise
Through a dream of
Molten stream
The green Mohawk
Seeking liquid blue
Floating in azure
Awakening lapping waves
Carrying down stream
The shore bound malaise.
Polarizing 2016
Polarizing
Now that calm has come
In the wake of the upheaval
There are some
I miss slightly
Who took flight
From me
When it was learned
I was a neverHillary
With just a turn of glass
Gone the glare
Gone the flare
What was obscured
Becomes clear
Vivid in hue
A nation not blue
But solid red.
Rush into
Rush into the night to find
Waxing crescent fleeing westward
Faithful to God’s ordered time
To the obedience of His word.
Pursue me
Pursue me
Pursue me
Draw me
Draw me
The voice of my beloved!
Behold, he cometh leaping
Upon the mountains
Skipping upon the hills.
SS2:8
Faithful
Rushed into the morning to find
Waning crescent fleeing westward
Faithful to God’s ordered time
To the obedience of His word.
Three rung rescue
Three rung rescue
John Clare Stokes
In a despair of cutting palmetto and prickling briar
The old hunters weary body began to tire
Pressing in upon his every side
The denizens hot upon his trail, he cried
When in the thick tangle, his end appearing
A tree of life with three rungs appeared
Down below as the snarling tusks circled snorting
High above the old hunter safely snoring.
What doth hinder thee?
What doth hinder Thee?
John Clare Stokes
Imagine the rickety wagon pulled by molly mule
returning from a sweltering rain starved field
when deep dips the rut road into shady cool
To the barn of home the two are steeled
when faintly a discernible voice whispers low
“Come to the water, what does hinder thee?”
It was that Saturday evening Preacher was called
A new name was written in Suwannee by night fall.
As the washed away sins made it to Fowlers Bluff
And on out into the Gulf.
A Prospect Primitive baptism
Suwannee River












