So sad, so sad, he missed the sun
So glad, so glad the rain has come.
For without the rain
The sun would fry his brain
So glad, so glad the rain has come.
For without the rain
The sun would fry his brain
The Spirits such a kind, kind friend
He comes to us in our darkest mares
And for a spell tarry’s there
To listen to the tormentor telling
Do you not remember his hitting
How his words were so hurting
And you turn to deflect the blow
Frantic with no place left to go
Then the Spirit tells the tormentor
Enough of your blows upon this soul
And breathes into the wounds healing
Deep, deeper while you are sleeping
And in the morning waking anew
A faint whisper comes to oppress
But somehow in the night to you
The terrible fist was turned to caress.
In the early hours of the deepest slumber
The little boy was wakened with a whisper
Calling him to come and join their number
It was a whisper once so familiar
But the little boy was fearful to obey
And told no one of this whispering friend
Lest they chide him as when in vision
He once said he saw angels visiting
The following evening at the same hour
Came the whispering one only much urgent
We haven’t time to tarry! For you I’m sent
Rise and we shall find the lost moments.
And so the boy arose and he did gladly go
With the night caller all was relived again
There was time with never a moment parting
He knew deeply all the passing scenes
The morning sun awoke him after many years
Was it a life upon lives lived so brief
Whatever it was the whispering one said
Eternity he was certain was but a continuation.
John Clare Stokes
There is a place near the slow flowing upper Suwannee
Where the sand is white beneath palmetto thick, where
the track of the turkey and deer converge
beneath the shade of the grand, cool mystic
In the impassible murky beyond the winding creek
The sound of rustling coming in the boggy way
It’s the piney wood rooters passing through
We scurry for a way of safety from the tusky
Up the lazy old oak into the abandoned stand
A pileated is startled to see the form of man
In time the beaded red eyed troop move on
All quiet resumes to consume the slough below
We saunter down not in a particular hurry
Wary lest the moccasin stirred from slumber
Strikes to count us among his number
Sure to follow close the well tracked trail out
Leaving this slough of the denizens of Suwannee
Past the sleeping foot washed ones of Prospect
There was no place upon earth we’d rather be
Than lost in the canopy of the primitive tree.
John Clare Stokes
Pappa she kept tightly in the urn upon the mantle place
Great Granny's wooden leg propped open the bedroom breezeway
Nights I'd try and get to sleep quickly
Before granny came shuffling in with cold cream on her face
Through the cracks and chinks the wind whispered
Who is that lying in the feathered bed
Do we hold a wake for another now dead
Now it's just the wind I was assured.
Then from the Florida room a fiddle
Upon the cool hard pine floor a tapping
Someone in there an old rhythm keeping
I dared not wake to peek in.
By morning rooster waking I asked
Granny did you enjoy last nights company
She smiled and dipped some Tube Rose slowly
Went about the early days tasks humming
Seems we weren't in this place by ourselves
I eventually grew accustomed to pappa Urn on the shelf
Great granny letting in the cool wind to warm by the hearth
Never invited but I eventually looked
Forward to the midnight fiddling to begin.
This is bug
His pedigree
Is he came
From Victor
The brother
In jail now
Who bought
Him for Ebony
His little
Princess
Who I
Purchased
For twenty
For my little
Prince
He was afraid
Of Bug
Who would
Whinney and
Snort
Must of been
His raising
Cross the tracks
For even without
His 4 batteries
In the dead
Of night
Bug would neigh
In the living room
Waking me
And I would
Go in and rub
Him down and
Give him some
Straw
I think even
Though the
Prince feared him
And the Princess
Outgrew him
He still called
For them.
With the loss
With the loss
With the loss
When was the
Winning season
Winning season
Never made state
Never will
Never will
The third place yellow district ribbon fades
Jon Perry of PK Young
Forever winning
Winning
Winning
The 180 low
hurdle race
20.2
johnclarestokes
The father recalls the golden years
Of a son that once lingered near
Of a father matching his gait
Pausing often to wait
Keeping the son in sight
And they would stop and listen
Poised in aim at any rustling
Hid in the tree boughs watching
And the crows would alarm at the sound
On the father and son looking down
The father would whisper now son
And the son would squeeze the trigger on the gun
And the father would say well done
Beaming with the bagging of the bushy tail
Of golden years the story we often would tell.
Days we somehow much more miss
Others it’s as if it never did exist
But the short time we had
Was grand for this grand mom and dad.
We just want to sit and dwell upon
The cool, fall days
But we must rise to face the heat
Lilies languishing at our feet.
My cousins in Mississippi and Alabama, Jeanne and Sue, took it upon themselves to plan a family reunion for this weekend in Homewood, Mississippi, their mother and father and my fathers birthplace. Lots of work went into it and hopes were high. Then one by one, circumstances arose and this one wasn’t coming, that one was sick, another just never responded. And so the reunion was cancelled, then revived with a remnant, then even that was cancelled today.
They said they wouldn’t plan another. It’s sad to live to witness the death of a family. Many I never knew except maybe a week or so my entire life when thankfully, our parents still took vacations to visit family, but no longer. We shall always remain strangers. Thank you Jeanne and Sue for trying.