March Madness
We don the blue
But a different shade
of blue
The true blues color
not that Kentucky blue
the little boy blue
hue.
We don the blue
But a different shade
of blue
The true blues color
not that Kentucky blue
the little boy blue
hue.
The ditch down from the house
is always the first place I see the
rain lilies appear.
Used to be with meme on our
way passing, she’d remark, and
I’d pull over and pick a few for her.
The bouquet boy misses that duty.
Why some folks
they smoke
Some they brush
On the
Down stroke
Some they just
Sit there like a
Pig in a poke
No joke
Watch that box
All day
Who you say?
Why some’s my
own kinfolk
John Clare Stokes
One thing for certain
When I’m gone
If anyone dares
Or cares
I’ve amassed a
Body of work
Of absolute worthless
Proportions
Of homeless at intersections
Of bikers on back roads
Of college co ed’s crossing
Of Skinny ones behind poles
Of white face cows conversing
Of even road kills
Nothing much was ever missed
The ever observing lens
Taking it all in
A streaming daily account
Of our lives passing through.
The hydrangeas and the pioneers
Price Creek Cemetery
Few are those who care for a swollen Suwannee
hiding the limestone and sand banks
Smoothing over the shoals and falls
Causing one to walk the trail above the trail
Give me the low trickling lazy Suwannee
Not this rapid racing torrent to the Gulf
by W.B.Yeats.
I heard the old, old men say,
'Everything alters,
And one by one we drop away.'
They had hands like claws, and their knees
Were twisted like the old thorn-trees
By the waters.
I heard the old, old men say,
'All that's beautiful drifts away
Like the waters.'
I see a few step out
To see what I have left
While they slept
I like to cover the landscape
In ice rhyme and cold prose
Hear the crunch beneath
My bared toes
Every field a sheet of paper
Every limb a pen
And I write for them
Before the sun my erasure
Corrects my spelling
it occurred to me
My calf was just like me
My calf was just like me.
And the calf’s in the field
With his cud a chewing
Little boy moos and
he says how I’m a doing?
John Clare Stokes
She led the blind birdwatcher
Down the dike trail
Leopold binoculars round the neck
By sound he could tell
What warbler it was
He heard before she saw
John Clare Stokes
What is your attraction Orange Hill?
that keeps us coming,your spanse to fill?
Is it that we all know one another
Or knew others who knew each other?
Is it the mother’s with the brothers
and sisters and the fathers with the
cousins and the ones we casually knew?
Who came for a season to our dwellings
to fix the plumbing or adjust the TV
or take our money in the teller windows,
who sat beside us in the pew on Sunday
and bagged our groceries on Monday?
What is your attraction Orange Hill?
Seems the longer I come the more I know
gathering here and the less I know
living so near.
John Clare Stokes
In the loft the old volumes found
Long out of print in dusky slow rot
Words gone unread with pages bound
by homes the daubers long forgot.
In the shed the old Briggs chugs
Pull rope frayed, varnished gas
Fuel lines stopped up with mud
Dauber homes from the past.
In the barn the Columbus cooking vat
Georgia Red cane grinding to a halt
Tobacco barn rabbit burners sputter and spat
it’s tiered rows the daubers sought.
On the porch the bare bulb is dim
We chip and chip for a yellow glow
A muddy mist casts a shadow slim
Keeping daubers warm long ago.
So brilliant were our golden guilds
Forever and ever they would last
But patiently the daubers build
His kingdom clogging, long after
ours is past.