From Rails to Boat tails
Waiting for Magritte
Johnclarestokes
Does everything align to your reason?
Must there exist rational explanation for everything?
If I showed you a mystery we shall not all sleep
Would you lie awake nights your soul to keep?
From Rails to Boat tails
Waiting for Magritte
Johnclarestokes
Does everything align to your reason?
Must there exist rational explanation for everything?
If I showed you a mystery we shall not all sleep
Would you lie awake nights your soul to keep?
Johnclarestokes
He would stop along the way to some humble
abode and ask intently why no interest
Why she had land and horses and the best family
Are you just of another persuasion?
And she’d assure him not and pray just someway
to get away
For the evening was coming
When under the cover of darkness
to slip away and meet the Silver Queen
to lie in the watermelon fields and listen
as the coyotes and hounds called to her
The girl with the horses long since sleeping
dreaming of her coming preacher boy
but he never came
For he too was under the spell of the
Silver Queen
And it wasn’t until years later
The grandson came
But by then the old preacher
Upon his dying bed
could only gaze into his eyes
without a word
That’s the price one pays
to give his love to the Silver Queen
her gestation measured in years
the grandson exiled to her island.
Johnclarestokes
Four swallowtail
Above me did sail
Above me did sail
Today
Three buzzards
Above me did hover
Above me did hover
Tomorrow
Two cardinals
Above me will discover
Above me will discover
Forever
This man
Below them was a lover
Below them was a lover
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
He sends His pure delight
With a sign from the height
On the wings of a kite.
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.
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
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.
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
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.
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.