Little Shoals
Suwannee River
The River recedes
Nikon D40
Tokina 11-16 2.8
Polarizing filter
6MP
Vivid setting
Suwannee River
The River recedes
Nikon D40
Tokina 11-16 2.8
Polarizing filter
6MP
Vivid setting
Bouquet boy made his way to Montmartre
There in the field he met Lise Treholt
The lover of his friend Renoir
Girl Gathering Flowers
Renoir
1872
Is the scene one to stand alone?
Does the scene depend upon one?
One says, for the one I so long
Another says, let’s rejoice ones gone.
Have you heard the Amaryllis play Holy! Holy! Holy! upon the fernaphone, have you walked quietly by Mary and the Christ child? If so, then you will never know why I sing the Song of Songs. All thy works shall praise thy name
Unless you've heard Amaryllis play Holy! Holy! Holy! upon the fernaphone, then you will know why I sing along.
await at the edge of bog
flying ferns will carry
over the cypress log
through palmetto kingdoms
above slash pine candles
to the dwelling of new sun
to water pristine beyond pure
Johnclarestokes
On the morning of the cloud Angels singing
The Thunderbirds taking wing
We were out at Mt Carmel gathering
The Chaplin he tried his very best
Not knowing who he laid to rest
The men in blue saluting one of the finest
friends a fellow will ever in life know
So many the miles we did go
Cameras, canoes, bikes in tow.
We both painted the same scenes
Listened to our Will McLean
Dove beneath the clearest streams
He could spot a chirp or a shard
Unearth history in any yard
Tell of the old Wellborn days hard
In Okefenokee we took my little son
Down River Narrows with Gators sunning
One of our many don't tell mamma son.
Lost in Osceola training for River Run
Hitching a ride with a hunter returning
Not concerned the daylight burning
Nearly a century you almost climbed
They were the best of times
Those hands joyfully raised crossing
That marathon line!
Bouquet boy wasn’t all the world perceived
For he was more Vincent and Edgar and Magritte
Than the marble faced triton among tie rods
It was mid April of 2011. Riding along the Palmetto Trail, I abruptly came upon a Forestry Service worker in his truck with bulldozer. He said, you may want to hurry on, we are about to do a controlled burn. I agreed and then something inside said, take his photograph. I asked if he would mind if I took a quick photograph. He said it was OK. I took it, thanked him and moved on. On June 20th, 2011, Brett Fulton and Josh Burch were killed in the Blue Ribbon Fire in Hamilton County. Upon comparing newspaper photographs of the two men, I realized that I had taken one of the last photographs of Brett. The photograph now hangs in memorial at my friend Rick Bringger's Firehouse Subs in Lake City, Florida.
Johnclarestokes
Can I find the place
the boys memory traces
beneath the creaking steps
where the doodle bug slept
til time for slipping slant in
sand the wandering ant
swatting yellow flies feeding
them to the ants soldiering
not wandering from the well
marked line where larvae dwell
to emerge to choose the single
file or the cool dark dwelling
of the doodles wild.
Can I find the time
the boy held the line
to mark the row where
the acre peas would grow
with the old dego hoe
keeping at bay the weeds
imaging himself a Yellow Jacket
halfback like Walt defeating Sneads
to hear a father call him back
from the field of dreams to the task
of making this earthly garden the
best this Wakulla soil ever knew.
Can I dwell for just a spell
to trace again that sweet smell
wafting from the off plum line kitchen
of morning bacon and pancakes
waking the boy on the top bunk
awaiting the call so he could jump
to dress and load the brown vest
with the four ten shells
to fell the chattering bushy tails
down by the old drainage pond
the aroma of spent shot heavenly
to a boy always hungry for
the wonders doodle land could bring.
Just a lot
That door at the end of the Williston United Methodist Church Sunday School wing was my fathers workshop where he kept the tools from before I was born and I now own. That large oak once had a large compost, worm bed of which we sold 50 for a dollar and used to fish mostly in the Whitehurst lakes. The next oak once had a tree house my brother and I spent much time in. The end of the ramp was the place we would climb to the roof and lay out, mostly my sister doing that. I would use it at night to look for UFO's and girlfriends coming to the A&P. There once was a tree in front of the workshop door where I would sit with my father and where I taught myself harmonica and composed many poems. And the lot too once held our home, the old white wood parsonage. It was moved toward Ocala I'm told. So when I park upon that spot where the garden grew, the gophers roamed, the boxer Goliath kept basketballs for himself from the brothers, the fishers came for the worms, the tools were used by a father who loved them, I walk quietly and reverently.
The Calla need not go to
Extraordinary expense
With makeup and apparel
Need not hire the top
Photographer to try and
Capture the beauty
No, they just arrive
At the promenade
Ready to cause all
Eyes to turn in
Wonderment.