The planets
Aligned
Just in time
For the end
Of time
Glad I was
Here before
The spinning
Out of alignment
Then the
Hurling us
Toward to North
Pole only now
Antarctica
Giving us relief
In this heat
Kingdoms come
Just when we
Need it.
Aligned
Just in time
For the end
Of time
Glad I was
Here before
The spinning
Out of alignment
Then the
Hurling us
Toward to North
Pole only now
Antarctica
Giving us relief
In this heat
Kingdoms come
Just when we
Need it.
johnClare stokes
For years I HID the way I was feeling,
The heart WITHIN at your sight in turmoil,
In THE unguarded moments a glance taking,
The SONNET then never a thing of toil.
It was in THIS thought today I dwelt,
The MESSAGE years ago I should have sent,
OF how it was I truly felt,
ALL these long years in silence spent.
With THESE words time and again unsaid,
Of SEEING ones content in the telling,
I visit the graves of these long dead,
How they LOVED in open together dwelling.
And I never raised to YOU the toast,
To tell all that I loved you MOST.
Man foot
I stood at the edge of the puddle
Pondering the path of the herons feet
Circling about the reflected sun
And I wondered
Why man would step in it
And intrude.
I can vividly see the day in the grape arbor chapel daddy constructed in his backyard, where mornings he’d sit and meditate, often upon a sermon he was to deliver that Sunday. I do not know what he told Landon that morning, I was out of earshot and did not want to intrude upon the conversation.
It’s now going on ten years since daddy went to Orange Hill, ten years since hearing any word from Landon. Father’s Day is one of those days of hope, that we will get the call, the card, the message upon the messenger, but we kind of know, like daddy resting with mamma at the cemetery, some things await the resurrection day.
It’s not the fathers we think of
upon this day
but the mothers who took time
to bake those oatmeal cookies
who made the fathers feel part
for few the sons
who compose the card
who pick out the tie
No, it’s their mothers who say
Sign this card to your daddy
Call your father
I don’t care
you haven’t spoken in years
Tomorrow I will not expect
the card
the cookies
the call
for you see
My mother isn’t here to remind
Anybody.
How many it don’t get any better
moments do we have in this life?
There we were at the turn of midnight
the lightening storm in the distance
over the calm star shining Ocean pond
You couldn’t hear the constant commotion
as our twenty five second exposures
tried to capture it
D7500 200-500
Sony A73r 200-600
D800 28-300
Few of us recall the old paths
Once so well marked and open
When came the lean years
The neglected days
When we no longer knew the way
New paths were blazed
Straight and to the point
Uninspired and sterile safe
And so we trudged and tramped
Where once we meandered
Merrily
Then came one who knew
The old crooked route
Who mended the fallen gate
Opened just enough the path
And though few still choose
This longer winding way
It is there
And not lost to the one
In need of some wandering along.
You see, we do not go down to the waters
in expectation of catching
Of taking from the deep
We go down in the expectation of
being there perchance the stirring
begins as the angel descends
and alone, we find the long sought
healing
It keeps us coming
I cannot recall who I handed the camera to on the Williston Methodist Church steps. We were celebrating the bicentennial of USA and centennial of First Methodist with Lewis proudly wearing his minuteman outfit mamma sewed.
We would stay in Williston until 1979 after ten years.
john clare stokes
They often ask in cliche tones if only walls could talk
And I tell them again, they do, you just weren’t taught their language
The manner in which they speak,
Continually telling those who know, with every creak in every shadow; telling you,
Take the time, stand ever so still, perhaps you’ll discern;
Listen, from the cool sand below the porch, the sound of playing, the lift of laughter:
The peeling paint above revealing the layers of many cheerful coming over greetings,
The haint blue porch ceiling, the spooks confusing,
not wanting to be sent into the water,
off the silver now brown tin the rain pattering in unison
to the old dog fennel hounds howling to the familiar tune.
In the crisp fall the old screen door spring snapping open and shut,
The voice to the ones in the field loudly calling them in
Some summer sultry days the conversations swell louder than the myriad cicadas dictating the words,
Rising to abruptly fall in silence as the invisible
conductor lowers the limb wand.
In winter you can hear the burring words in the chattering chill
Swear from the cracked chimney a fire was yet glowing
Sending sweet aromas of curing one could cut and taste,
the front room always kept warm for the ones
outside wandering afar
Wondering if the inner wars they were battling would
ever come to terms of peace
The smooth glass door knob turning in the evening gloam
Those huddled about the hearth determined they heard the words of one long ago journeying
But it wasn’t the traveller returning after all
It was but the talking walls
Yes, the echoes off the walls telling it all.
Gum Swamp Rd
Burned down
He was sort of poet
But mother
She was
Well she once
Wrote
Poetry
Before I
Came along
That was all that was
Necessary
To make a poet
A preacher and
A Home Ec teacher
And thus
My son is a poet
And his son will be one too
And thus begins
A long lineage
Of poets.