Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Vera


 Irene and Vera. A kind man gave me a rare tip today and I passed it on, telling Vera, 92 that I would give her a print of her mother Irene and her, whom she lost at the age of eleven, her mother dying in childbirth. My father lost his own mother, a year later in 1937 from a blood cot. He never forgot his Ethel Marie either.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Swoosh


 Startled from his silence  

The swoosh swoosh strode past  

The old strider saluted the steeds 

 Silent in the recall of lost speed

Flowing fountain


 By the flowing fountain


Near the flowing well to forever dwell

Old Sopchoppy under your long spell

Though far I've roamed from your halls

In my heart the flowing fountain calls

Come John, drink anew from me

Stay, stay forever in old Sopchoppy.

The burning


 The burning


Saturday we burned the pile

of hard raked leaves along

with the limbs long while

laying about the cluttered throng.


It is good to burn the dross

to see the ground again in May

steel it for the eventual frost

reveal the paths of children’s play


Now rise the planted sprouts

now falls the jasmine from above

we count our costs and gather about

nurture the ones we long have loved.

Spiritless


 It was the Ft Lauderdale 

to Chicago

I could not image anyone

even wanting to take 

that flight

but the heavens full of

those on the wrong flight.

Worm man


 This worm of a man

sat in contemplation

of being a worm 

now that’s a good thing

for that’s what sets 

him apart from a worm

the ability to squirm

before the hook has 

even been stuck in


Consciousness

High key heron


 High key heron


Lifting directly in front of the rising sun called for a quick plus two exposure compensation.

Someday I imagine cameras having a Siri System where you can quickly say, Nikon, plus two!


D850 with 70-300P lens.

He knew me


 He knew all about me 

John Clare Stokes


Yesterday there we sat

Nearly an hour

With the mother

Who birthed me

We talked of the

Same familiar things

As before


Later that evening

The daughter called

Mom said

Some man in a green

Shirt came to sit

Upon her bed


He talked of familiar things

She wondered how he knew.

Old Florida


 Old Florida yet calls come,

Come lil one from the nouvelle 

Cool is the water from the well

Come, sit a spell with me dwell.

The best garden


 The best garden

John Clare Stokes


The best garden cannot be gotten 

from the depot or the low place

The best gardens are begotten 

from every face we can trace 


And say, this moon vine came from

a long dear friend, this lily came 

from Luther, these gourds from

Markham now gone, living on,

in the best garden.

Burning Suwannee


 Burning Suwannee


Heavenly Line by john Clare Stokes


It was one of those steaming hot days of April at Big Shoals on the Suwannee River. I was on the Mountain Bicycle making my way West along the trail from the Big Shoals down to Little Shoals where the vehicle was parked. As I came to the intersection of Roads 5 and 6, I heard a siren sound. I rode a few yard further and met a Forestry Service Truck with a bulldozer in tow. I stopped. The gentleman in the truck said they were about to do a controlled burn and were there any other cyclists behind you? I said I was the only bicyclist. Feeling compelled for some unexplained reason, I asked the kind gentleman if I could take his photograph. He said sure. I quickly composed one photo and hurried along my way. Behind I could see the smoke rising from the controlled burn.

I drove my vehicle to the Columbia County side of Big Shoals at Bell Springs and photographed the Suwannee River with the smoke bellowing in the background.  I returned home, and did not give the lone photo another thought. Until....

It wasn't until the June 26 Reporter published a small photograph of Brett Fulton, 52 who lost his life in a Forest Fire on June 20th along with his fellow worker, Joshua Burch. It bore a resemblance to the photograph of the gentleman I had taken back in April.  I attempted for several weeks to get someone to identify the person in the photograph. Finally, a friend who works as a welder for the Forestry Service, Joe, came by where I worked, and I showed him the photo. He said that it was Brett in his truck.

I share this photograph as a tribute to Brett and as possibly the last photograph taken of him in April. He died fighting the Blue Ribbon Fire in Hamilton County on June 20th, 2011.. May his family and fellow workers who mourn his loss, along with Joshua, find comfort in the many who expressed their love and support.


The Heavenly Line


Into this wilderness forest

We venture brave and bold

The sun is high and before

us grand vistas unfold

But all too soon the path

grows dark and the trail

narrows and ends

It is then when all seems

lost and hope is gone

That there are two whom

the Lord now sends

With fires blazing all about

With embers closing in

upon the narrow way

Through the smoke and

fire they come one by one

Sent to grade the Heavenly

Line

To make a straight path

of safety to His Son.

Suddenly they are gone to

return to the ranks.

We look up through smoke

To see the straight ribbon blue

and say to the Lord,

Thanks for sending

Brett and Joshua

to clear the way to you.

Friday, May 1, 2026

Lannie


Radicalization 

john clare stokes


He was a quiet little boy

He loved to go fishing

On Ocean Pond

Hunting at the meat stand

In the Osceola

We thought him dyslectic

Taking him to the renown

Dr Levinson in New York

He saw lady liberty

He saw the twin towers

We took him to Alaska

He saw Mt McKinley

Made snow angels 

Stood beside a stuffed grizzly

We look back for any sign

The day on the Camp Street

Porch his will wouldn't break?

The Trooper window he kicked out?

Skipping the afternoon of Middle School?

He graduated in the usual way

The same way we did

Surrounded by those we 

Would never see again

He had a strong desire for mission

We sent him to Papua to

Spend a month with the

Wano tribe

He returned with a handmade 

Bow and arrows the tribesmen made for him

He still smarted from the nose

piercing without antithesis 

Two naked Wano men holding him

A fireman since his pappa would take him to the station

The surfer boy proudly wore

His overcoat and boots

The day he married standing in the Santa Fe river

I recalled the time in this very spot

He was but a baby in the boat

The shear pin on the propeller

Was broke

And I had to pull him and his mother back to this landing

Never thinking this would be

His point of no return

And thus the little Lannie

With the great smile

Has taken upon his shoulders

The weight of isolation 

The burden of silence

The promise of not honoring

The mother and father

The radicalization

Of a life.


First canoe trip

Okeefenokee Swamp

Written May 1, 2013

He will return?