Sunday, June 14, 2026

Fathers of sons


 Fathers of sons


Wasn’t it a grand thing

When we’d gather in

the day with laughter

enough to chase all

cares away


Oh what a day

On the wings of


 On the wings of a Snow White kite

He sends His pure delight

With a sign from the height

On the wings of a kite.

Your limb


 I’m sitting watching the moon

I hear a cracking sound

A pine limb big enough to squish me

Falls within ten feet avoiding the vehicle

Don’t think tree limbs don’t have a

Master guiding them

So be prepared

Should the Master one day say

Limb, upon him.

River Narrows


 River Narrows  

 by John Clare Stokes  


  Okeefenokee paddle strokes  

Trembling under thwart 

 Bull Gators provoked  

Island hammock snorts 

 Black bear splashing 

 Paddle strokes increasing  

Into tannic crashing 

 Fear never ceasing  

Into River Narrows  

Suwannee's birth canal  

The silence grows  

 Then screams and howls  

 Conceived into flow  

 Eternal toward sea 

 New secrets unfold 

 Birthed from Okeefenokee


Bob Jones in Dougon on River Narrows

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Ten Years After


 Ten Years After

Johnclarestokes 


Alvin Lee I would listen to

going home, to see my baby

I'd love to change the world

Everywhere freaks and fairies

We thought yesterday 

Back to two oh thirteen

and before that oh three

and on and on back the 

Ten years after

And how much happened

In the last Ten Years After

And wondered what could

Possibly happen in the next

Ten Years Coming.

Meme the reader


 I got the old photo of meme reading a Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan book as a girl, printed for Paula to give to Claire.

Old town life


 Old Town life


And what of this old life?

Waters paddled upon

Rivers crooked and long

Some we've been upon

Many, many a time

Others never to see

In our Old Town journey

To open a bed of worms


 To open a Bed of worms


In our Williston years, my father and I maintained a bed of worms, “the best you ever saw” said Bobby Sandlin who lived next door, the worm bed defining our property line. The bed was fed by the bantam chickens manure we raised in a pen my father made, by cow manure from the Elliot Whitehurst’s huge feedlots, and every scrap left from meals mamma made and the vegetables and leftovers from the garden beside the parsonage. 

And people would come and we’d dig for them a hundred wigglers for a dollar, an easy task for there were thousands in big clusters when you turned up the rich compost. 

When we moved from Williston to Lake City, like all our prior moves, daddy took a large quantity of worms to start a new bed. My father always maintained one where ever we lived, for he loved to fish. I don’t miss so much the digging, but I sure miss fishing with him in Pappy’s lake.

Sandman range


 Sandman Range


We climbed and climbed for hours on end

It seemed we’d never reach the summit

We heard beyond there was this vast ocean

We flung our lives as to the waves we’d plummet.

O Jude


 o jude 

Johnclarestokes 

in the latter years, came the cankerous men, burning, creating wastelands, removing the old landmarks, swarming, ravenous as locusts, wandering, devouring, in the aftermath, the drought came, in the parched wail, birthing, a new world, disordered, discordant, disconnected, decadent.

Library show




 After dropping off the entries, I see that it will be a big challenge to win, place or show, with what I saw, especially Herb Ellis large monochrome prints. We shall see Tuesday. 

Bless the zinnas


 Bless the Zinnia's

by Johnclarestokes 


Father I trust you will forgive me

For they were Dollar General Zinnias

Four packs for a mere dollar

And I am not even sure

If I can get them to grow

the way they would for you,

Even though from far,far away

the seeds you'd let me spread,

little colored buttons soon opening

to sauce pan size growing,

and we would gather up a bouquet

upon the altar bowing as you prayed

the repentant would kneel near

the zinnias between you and their tears

watering them

perhaps revealing why

the zinnias grew so greatly.

Oh father

bless from on high

the dollar general zinnias

with my efforts be pleased.


Ernest Stokes, father of Luther Stokes in Homewood, Mississippi