Day Spell
I do not know what overcame me
Perhaps it was her day lilies
I told her I didn't care if she was over eighty
Her lilies made her look under thirty to me.
I do not know what overcame me
Perhaps it was her day lilies
I told her I didn't care if she was over eighty
Her lilies made her look under thirty to me.
I’ve pretty much my entire life been a runner. On a hill in Virginia covered in apple trees, three pre-schoolers began running down the hill toward the cabin where the apple butter was cooking in a kettle. We ran so fast we couldn’t stop and my Grandfather Richard, my mothers father and her two brothers Kermit and Don had to lock arms to catch my cousins Donna and David before we hit the cabin.
A few years later on another hill in Monticello, the coach had a race down the hill to the guardrail and back to determine the fastest third grader. Having moved from Sopchoppy, where all we did was run freely all over town, the new kid in school outran everyone. It was the ice breaker, for from then on, the boys wanted this fast third grader to be their friend.
Years and years later on a sweltering hot July Saturday in Jasper, that little boy yet on that Virginia hill emerged from the shade to run down Hatley Street to take second in the 10k among so many friends cheering the boy home who wouldn’t stop.
Psalm 39:10
The waves consume
And my bend is to run
But I turn
And face them
Just to know the punch
Of a power beyond
Comprehension
The turkey oaks are not a friendly folk
And the sweet gum are stuck up bums
I want you cypress to see
Not all trees have lovely knees.
The cypress take a field trip
Mossy Jesus
Even though
You are lichen
Encrusted
You still
See us
Like old
We offer
You bleach
As if it
Would
Whiten you
Up
When it's us
Who need
The
Bleach
So we can
See
You.
John Clare Stokes
One I felt was following
My every paddle stroke matching
I’d pause, it would pause
Increase cadence, it too
Pulling into the cool shade
I awaited the expected fate
When the whisper came near
Friend, I’m glad you stopped to rest with me.
I was here all along.
Mamma doe said rest here beneath the grapes
Whatever you do, don’t run, I’ll be near by
If it’s time to run, I’ll make a sound of escape
But little fawns are hard of hearing besides
How can I be sure mamma is nearby?
And what if that black thing is a gun?
What does mamma know?
No, I will run, run, run, run!
Johnclarestokes
On the fields of Trenton far away,
In the fading fall of sixty-seven,
From the sky a ball spiraled his way,
Lost in the vapor lamps under cool heaven.
In the bleachers of away sat a father,
Cheering the son on his long route,
Can this time in young arms gather,
the falling ball hidden by light?
Into the end zone of home we reached,
The clutching of pigskin in outstretched hands,
A sound arose grander than any sermon preached,
A father cheering his son from the stands.
First touchdowns, victories, falling balls,
So far from the fly route once ran,
But the one thing near he still recalls,
A fathers voice above the cheers in the stand,
Way to go John!
John Clare Stokes
For years they dwelt beside the shady quiet road
Kept the front yard neatly swept
The petunias and posies in the clay pots
Dressed their best for worship down
At the Greater Poplar Springs Missionary
They were part of the good times
Before the naming of the shady road
after brother Martin Luther King
When in the neighborhood, before it
was a hood,the children were good
Minded a daddy who was there
There with granny and her husband
Didn’t need no ole Lyndon Baines to
Rebuild this already great society
But he did as the old ways died
And so the remnants of how it was
Linger about
Exposed for those who can’t recall
How warm homes hearth used to be.
I knew you
Through a
Purple haze
You were the
Only one who
Ever my poetry
Really read
You understood
Copying them
On purple lined
Paper in a spiral
Notebook
In a world of
Age reversal
We were out of
Sync
I don't think
I'll ever make
Purple my favorite
Color again
The color was for then
Poetry from a dried up
Purple pen.