Saturday, May 5, 2012

Along the Riverbank


















The luminescence of low hanging mist whirls
Agitated winds shiver the tall cottonwoods
The ever present sound of the old river passing
She stands on the small rustic pier daydreaming
Watching the waters carry an old tugboat south
She waves as the captain sounds his sad horn
A breeze catches the hem of her dress, lifting it upward
Her long slender legs and bare feet exposed to morning rays
A single teardrop falls from her troubled eye
She knows she will soon be leaving this magical place
Traveling far to the western desert, and away from her folks
She turns and leaves, making her way up the wet path
She ponders her anxious future amid the vines of honeysuckle
The smell of bacon soon fills her senses as her home appears
Smoke curling down from the antique stone chimney
Porch steps squeak, the screen door slaps, she has decided


© Copyrights G. Jones 2012
Photo by writeemcowboy.com







Friday, May 4, 2012

Teach I




To those of who love to teach



"Teaching through creative arts."


Take kids away,even if
they stay.

Stories, music, objects,
and thoughts
are what we play.

We can write,
speak, draw,
or act.

Become the place
and the thing.
Now write about us
in that place.

"I am the wind, I like to blow things."

Whatever we want
to think or be
is okay.

Make a living meadow
or a bear.

"GrrRRR!"

Take kids away
even if
we stay...

© Copyrights G. Jones 2005





First Battle

To big guns and destroyer men

The alarm sounds like a dull clanging bell.
Sailors in their battle gear run for posts.
“Hatches are closed and zebra set!” we yell.
A surprise in store for Iraqi hosts.

The towers rose from the sea like islands.
They were made of steel, rubber, and plastic.
Arab men scrambling to flee in bands,
Their boats speeding away, faces frantic

Big guns sound, blazing fire and hot lead fly,
Metal islands reduced to flaming spire.
Retaliation ordered from the sky,
Mission complete, we leave ocean afire.

Our first taste of battle went as was planned.
New sea stories to tell when we hit land.

© Copyrights G. Jones 2006



"This is a poem based on my memory of an attack on Iraqi oil rigs in the Persian Gulf. My destroyer, along with two others, was ordered by Ronald Reagan to attack the Iraqi oil rigs in retaliation for their attacks upon unarmed tankers in the Persian Gulf in 1986."

Hotel Street


Memories of a lonely sailor on liberty

A swift flash of the wrist, "Eight ball corner."
Fresh brew, another cigarette, "Who's next?"
A little chalk, another new comer
Long drink, a fast break, the balls write the text

"Hey! Jam a couple quarters in the box!"
"Play some rhythm and blues for my soul."
Choose my prey from the alone, like a fox
"Rack ‘em up sucker, open your billfold."

”Another round for new friend. What's your name?"
Beer's good, game on the tube, bartender is nice
Passing the time by being in the game
Four ball in the side, "Gonna bank it twice."

A night on Hotel Street, in paradise
The most safe harbor for those of despise




© Copyrights G. Jones 2006


Author's Comments:
"Another in the series of sailor sonnets; memories of my time as a destroyer sailor in Pearl Harbor."



Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Late Afternoon Photograph

Fading images on the distant street

Walking and gesturing conversation

In a neighborhood of quiet shadows

And a receding soft afternoon’s feel


A mother calls her children to supper

A screen door slams, a distant train whistle

A warm breeze carries the scent of mowed grass

As stray leaves dance along the narrow street


I sit quietly, watching from my steps

A worn mitt and rubber ball in my hands

Cool sweat on my face, from bouncing and grab

Transistor radio dialed to baseball


A front porch swing rocking, a daydreaming girl

Her soft shy smile catches my attention

A distant neighbor hand trucks his trash cans

Out to the street for morning pick up wait


Looking back, I see a now empty swing

From the front door, my mother calls me in

I stand wiping my face with my shirt sleeve

Glove and radio in hand, I retreat


The day ended, but not the memory

Photographs, forever in my mind’s eye



© Copyrights G. Jones 2006





Late




There was no sound from her,
but that of rattling plates
and microwave beeps.
The hour was late
as I sat with the dog,
one shoe off,
jacket unbuttoned.

© Copyrights G. Jones 2006


Crossing the River Styx

The pin-striped suits with folded newspapers

Three rows of cramped and swaying commuters


With headphones, to escape in wordless song

From the clammy claustrophobic, squeezed mass


A grinding stop and sliding doors open

The rush of cool air, and the exodus


The sound of diesel engines and bus breaks

The smell of exhaust and stale urine floats


Large flocks, divided by streetlights, spread forth

Peeling into vast canyons, left and right


The endless broken conversations hum

With invisible listeners afar


Eyes straight ahead and never in focus

Unseein' and anonymously vague


A taxi’s horn, the door sliding open

A destination is given and silence


Kaleidoscopes of imagery pass by

Before halting at the entrance to Hell


© Copyrights G. Jones 2006

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Clippings

To childhood memories

I received a gift in the mail today
It was in a tattered box, from mother.
It was my dad's wallet and pocket knife.

In the wallet, were clippings and photos.
The clippings were from the local papers.
They reported father's untimely death.

The old knife was rusted, from his pocket.
I suspect he used it to clip his nails.
I have faded memories of him now.

The photos were of my sister and me.
School pictures of us, very young we were,
and those taken when we were babies too.

I have thought of the day my father fell,
over the years, on many sleepless nights.
What was he thinking on the long way down?

Did he know this was the end of his life?
Did he think one last time of sis and me?
Did he wonder what would become of mom?

I remember one of the clippings well.
I saw many like it neatly clipped out.
They blew around the windy school yard grounds.

My schoolmates had clipped them for show and tell.
I returned to school from the funeral,
and there they were, discarded in the dirt.

Everything changed for sister and me,
on that day, returning from school for lunch.
Our world changed forever when that knife fell.

I placed them in my music room close by.
They sit in the corner of my eye there.
Tokens of what might have been long ago.

© Copyrights G. Jones 2006

Author's Comments:
"I learned of my Father's death one fine fall day, when I returned home from school for lunch. My mother was on the phone crying. Later, after my father's funeral, I returned to school to find clippings blowing around on the school grounds. They were all about my father. The students had cut them out for show and tell, and later discarded them on the school grounds."

Beneath the Fan

I wake lying across a king sized bed
A fan spins above the small sunlit room
Creating a ringed silhouette above
My eyes wander down to a pale ankle
Resting on my chest like an open book
Wearing a golden chain with a fine clasp
Attached to a soft slender milky leg
Moving my hand up, caressing gently
Stopping at a pair of violet panties
Sliding fingers beneath the elastic
Then releasing it with a light crisp snap
The ankle's foot slides beneath my boxers
I turn my head slightly, looking upward
Into mischievous sapphire blue eyes

Some mornings are just better than others

© Copyrights G. Jones 2008




Sunday, April 29, 2012

The Power of Stupid


Since stupidity is the dominate power in America, it's too bad we can't harness it somehow and use it as a force for good.