Sunday, November 23, 2025

Shadows Underfoot


 Shadows Underfoot


by john Clare stokes


Must train for the marathon

Twenty mile training run

Roger comes by tomorrow morn

A bike ride over to Wellborn

For now I must prime this canvas

Start that ole Jubilo Master left us

Is that Stokes with the new Nikon?

I forgot that fall is already coming

Here, let's load the Mohawk, help me,

Let's paddle by Steve's on the Suwannee.

Think I may bring the scuba tanks

Never know what treasures hide along the banks.

They say there's China under Cone Bridge,

And a hidden Spanish fort up on the ridge.

Can we ride a ways through the Osceola?

We may just uncover another arrow point.

I must work on my notes from Guadalcanal

My Navy days and the seas burning for miles.

Is it Wednesday? Its bean soup night I forgot.

Roger you said is gone?

Do you see the shadows under my feet?

I finished that marathon strong.


Robert “Bob” Jones

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Edge past


 Edge Past

john clare 


Imagine in that

Glimpse to edge of sight

When transfixed

In a colour scent

When beyond your

Downcast eyes

You are drawn beyond

The old pecan grove

To the edge of past

And you walk

And you talk

And you long

Surely you must have

Imagined

Tracing Camellia petal trails

Abruptly ending

Just at the point of 

You weren't alone.

Kirk


 With Kirk in Cedar Key


We had moved from Williston to Lake City in 1977 after ten grand years there. My friend from Williston Kirk Hartley got up with me and I had one of my all time epic days. We took his boat and put in at the Wacasassa Marina in Gulf Hammock and went down coast to Cedar Key where we fished. We later went down the river where the Wild Hog Canoe Race is held, finding shark teeth. Great times they were. Thanks Kirk.

The Wilmore Thanksgiving


 The Asbury Thanksgiving 


Upon moving from Monticello, Florida to Wilmore, Kentucky to the Asbury College duplex in 1965, the family was complete with Lewis, born in Tallahassee in sixty-three and sister Paula. Present were Wayne Tarpley, a Georgia boy unable to go home for Thanksgiving and our beloved late Uncle William Clark, who lived in the little apartment behind us with his brother Billy. A grand two years. Also there, but not shown was Monnie, or Ethel Orander, my mothers mother from West Virginia who lived with us, sleeping in Paula’s bedroom. Lewis and I shared a room with him on the top bunk. Daddy was the Alumni and Public Relations director under President ZT Johnson, long time family friend from when Mamma and daddy attended Asbury.

Friday, November 21, 2025

The blood of Lona


 The blood of Lona

by John Clare Stokes...


Before him descended a legion of dragonflies  

 Sent to part the skeeter cloud  

 All about the curdling cries  

 The fall of blood from the skies  


  Parsing through the red sea of carnage 

 Grateful for this field of the dead  

 Who could discern the Master's plans  

 How his dragonfly army today would be fed?


Eek upon the crumbs thrown beneath tables

upon the heights over the finest gables

Fly the army of Lazarus over bloody ground

Ignoring cries to please send a Moses down.


Not even a dog remained to lick the wounds

As the waters of Lona turn a brilliant red

The dragonfly brigade obscuring a blood moon

The host of heaven over Lona again fed.

Ebb stand


 Ebb Stand

John Clare Stokes


waxing moon in wane of life...high stand at low ebb....between strandline and middle zone... hermit,urchin and mussel clam...shy, slow, in my shell....Willet,Sanderling and Plover...no tern, skimmer or gull....between the spray and sand....I make a final stand.

The proposal


 The proposal 


As is often my routine, I can pretty much be found in one of three or four locations each morning and evening, Alligator Lake County Park, Halpatter Park, Alligator south dock or Watertown dock. Tonight after leaving Watertown and stopping at Winn Dixie for Coke Zero’s for Melanie( my so many mask wearers), I drove the short distance to Halpatter Park behind the DOT for the sunset. I stood out on the end of the dock and waited for planes or birds to pass over the moon. I noticed a blue compact car parked. Then came a wedding party and a photographer. I watched them and walked up and took two shots. The blue car I thought was part of the wedding party. Near dark I got in my Pathfinder. That was when the blue car cranked up and pulled up beside me. The old guy said, do you come here often? It angered me because I thought he was next going to say, did you take photographs of the couple? You can’t. But he didn’t. Come to find out he was an old gay guy who was told to meet at the lake while online. I tried to help him by explaining they more than likely meet in the park or the south dock and not here. 

He asked was I gay? I said no and he apologized.

Come to think of it, I was hit up several years ago in the park on the trail. Guess that sign Don’t leave dikes has a double meaning.

So to be safe, carry a lady with you.

He was still there as I pulled off.

Old gays hold onto the end. No pun intended. 

Basketball John


 The Promise Land is West of Vicco

john clare


The boy next door continually kicked the football in the air. Over and above the privacy fence into the Florida blue sky. I do not think he possessed Tebow's spirit, for with every errant kick, expletive's went up with it, veiled in order to keep granny from chiding. Cursing in encryption.

I was once this boy. In the summer of the sixties, my three teen-age uncles from Homewood, Mississippi would board the Trailway's at Stokes Grocery to arrive at the Gulf Station in Sopchoppy. They would spend the summer with us.

It was my Uncle William Clark who took a special interest in me. Since he was a child, he too had caught the ball spirit and he was doing all he knew to pass it along to me. Never mind that I knew nothing of this gospel steeped in Miss State Bulldog theology. He was on the recruiting trail as this Uncle Rico-like fanatic would tell me over and over, go long! Go long! And the ball would soar over the mountains into Mr Laird's yard. He would come out scolding in his stern German accent, threatening to burn the ball. A regular Furher!

Coming from Vicco, Kentucky where I was taken home soon after being born in my mothers home of Bluefield, West Virginia, while I hadn't a clue, I lived close enough to the Mecca, Lexington and Adolph Rupp's Wildcats to have Caewood Ledford's smooth voice convert me.

The spirit of the round ball surfaced soon after we moved from Sopchoppy to Monticello. I had never made a hoop that I know of, but I had my father build me a basket and goal. And so the shooting began. Like myriads of boys in the homeland around Vicco, I too spent all my time around the dirt court. Though I loved football winning second place in the Punt, Pass and Kick, my first basketball game one night during half time of a Monticello Tiger basketball game. The third grade boys were split in two teams with the A competing with the B. My friend Marc Bishop and I were on the B team, competing against the talented Plaines brothers, Butch and Bobby. I made my first basket and first free throw finishing with a team high of three points. Even though we lost 6 to 5, basketball became my passion. We only stayed two years in Monticello and it was with joy we moved to Asbury College in Wilmore, Kentucky, only a few miles from Memorial Gym on the Kentucky campus. Soon after my Uncle William arrived to live out back with Brother Billy. They were now in college and they took me to my only Kentucky basketball game against the Bulldogs. Sadly to me my hero's lost and I was not consoled, even with William taking me afterwards to the State locker to meet one of his friends, Chuck Wade, who helped defeat Pat and Louie!

But I was hooked. Not a Bulldog as William hoped, but a Wildcat.

After two short years we returned to Florida. In Williston I again spent all my time on the court by the house. I played on the JV and  high school teams but never really excelled, though being blessed with the spirit, not the flesh. White man syndrome. Too stiff, too short, too white.. No jumping ability. But it did not quench the inner boy who always remained. Out on the court alone, his team in his head, Caywood in his head announcing, the crowd in his head cheering. And he Louie would dribble up the asphalt court. And he Louie would pass to Riley. And he Rily would work it in to Thad. Thad would toss it back to Louie at the top of the key who would swish it. String music Caywood would announce. The crowd went wild. Chuck Wade and State never beat UK again, in my mind.


Photo with my goal from Monticello.

Reprise

When Beach Bums...and Nikons...grandpaws and grandsons....converge...gulls laugh...waves clap...beyond all words...now the waves recede...the tides cry...gulls lull...and the waves pray....a loss for words....we hold the shells to ear...in hope to hear but one word....


The long curve


 since it has been going on two Novembers 

his shadow remembers and lingers

in the long Still Road S curve

just down from where we slowed

to recall Judy and her crooked tree

lingering we knew

awaiting our journey by

lately it seems more are the shadows

awaiting our passing

patient along the still roads 

stepping out beside the

long Taylor way to wave

as mirages upon the hot 

asphalt

over the Interstate hill

beckoning us to please wait

under the lone persimmon

letting them catch up

only to spin beyond our sight

determined to make Moniac

for some invisible reward

of being the first to greet 

us as the shadows gather in

front of the single store on 

the way to nowhere

and prepare

for the tracing of the route

back to the long Still Road 

S curve

to greet Judy and gather

the shadow waiting 

patiently...

Kerr syrup


 Kerr Syrup


Opened today the

last five jars of the

Old blend

From the long ago

Cooking

Mostly dregs

Daddy said

Still good 

Stirred in the

Ham

Biscuit and eggs

And so they stayed

In the shed

Until today

Poured anew in

The long neck

Bottle

To sit again

 Simply kept

For the sweet

Taste of

Remembering.

Wild wind gone


 With wind gone

Johnclarestokes 


Calm gentle

Relentless wind

Weathering fading smoothing

The long leaf heart pine

We patch

We paint 

We mend

But still blows the

Calm gentle

Relentless wind

The second

The minute

The year

The wind cares not

For the time

Rise to face it 

Make a stand for 

Eighty and nine until

The nuptial knotted threshold

Wears thin to lie at last

In piles of tinder

And it comes

Calm gentle

Relentless wind

To ignite and scatter

The august memory.