Rocks of the Stream by Gerald William Brooks
Book I
Copyright 1976
Rocks of the Stream Book I High Meadow/Stony Brook by Gerald William Brooks
Dedicated to Griswald Wesley Carlton GouMin WongThom Brooks
Strangers we and yet, not, as our life, is lived, in the same eternity.
From two eyes... Looking Sometimes Little Things Old Leaves The seed of change... An Empty Glass Friendship III "Isn't that what home is about?" Sapling The wind... Words to a Friend Solid Coin To My "Self' On the Eve of Christmas You love the snow... Snow weights the leaf... dancing, falling... ...would see again... Who among us... By Day's Light Before Night Often,... No tree may grow... Friend Fred... What a smile... It took the wind... Can we understand... A Peaceful Hearth Burns Budding... The Chase Our greatest joys.. Our measure... What moments we know... He knows our love... Felt again... Any less... Yet children... A child grows... And we wondered if... Only 'good'...
1 & 2 3 3 3 4 5 5 5 6 7 8 8 9 10 11 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 14 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 20 20 21 21 21 22 & 23 24 25 26 & 27 28 28
From two brown eyes
did materialize Mine Gumbie Oh! Such form such grace among thoroughbreds a place She. Gainly sticks tube of gum curls in the lap "I love you 'mum'." tries to run and only tumbles tries to walk and stumbles What lament! too long, too much time was taken but for her eyes all is mistaken Forgotten in the making was her nose, tried to pull it out it popped to her toes tried to make her smile tried, yet, the best a droopy grin Oh! My pain my suffer'n I forgot her tail forgot her bark her wail She can't then wag happiness no bark she can't run speak, ask, have fun without a wail tell of loneliness
or of pain 1
MineGumbie you're not to blame You make me laugh though I shouldn't make me grin when no one else could though I doubt I should Of you, the best be my caring all my sharing From two brown eyes you materialized eyes which I though so beautiful so deep with love with a look that says there's only you forevertoday For all that might not seem right none can replace smiles I've shared the laughter your ‘following me after’
2
Looking Looking at a flower Looking at a tree Looking at the lake at the world surrounding me and I like what I see in me
Sometimes Sometimes is a funny tree here a leaf there a leaf where you please sometimes isn't always sometimes never has to be so, sometimes, we're sometimes me
Little Things A plane flies only with fuel birds but with wings So it is with friends parted but for knowledge of little things
3
Old Leaves Country folk may have their fences to mend, one on either side, old leaves out of winters snow are the making of neighbors where town folk reside Each their own grassy meadow trimmed with plants and trees none would have covered again by old fallen leaves. Spring's first warm weekend may find a neighbor or two in their yards raking out old leaves and making new conversation too
4
The seed of change may burst forth yet, it too, must grow and weather the seasons At once we are the soil and the sun the seed and the gardener
An Empty Glass Winter's dreams flow into spring, and as we drink we hope summer to bring the flavor of reality For someone to fill our glass that we might sing summers long we may sit, waiting as an empty glass is a poor thing yet poorer still is a heart in which dreams don't ring
Friendship
5
III
A friend is as still waters the reflection there seen never hides truth be you beautiful or not, it is you And as with those still waters you may be washed or caressed sharing its gifts be you poor or rich, you're accepted
"Isn't that what home is about?" "It is the Spring of the year, he said, I've managed to last it out this long; the breath is short, there is only the going to." "Why?" He asked, "Why don't they let me go home?" "All the years of living there; must it: the smells, woods and wax, the rooms the warmth and love I knew, be denied me?" "Am I to be left with plastic smells and white empty walls?" "The going would be better there, I'd not be so afraid; my rest would come easier there, isn't that what home is all about?" Would you tell them, for me, my breath is too short?"
6
Sapling When yet a sapling not much more than a twig, with leaves so small much may come to serve upon, to make and shape your very form If it be in passing years, that the north wind caught and bent you some, winters snow has laid heavy upon your boughs, summers heat and too, spring rain Remember, how once you stood straight as the trees surrounding you Know this lest in your being and frame of mind you lay as in form, bent and weathered
7
The wind may last the day yet it is the wind and blows away
Words to a Friend "... and when it was that I was poor, you opened your door and let me touch the beauty of your soul."
8
Solid Coin It is not that yesterday's dreams could not be today's realities but they were then and we have passed their probabilities Coined silver for everyone but a thief takes that away paper certificates then are made and lose their value day by day So our lives pass coined silver in youth and we dream and dreams are stole away then we give out certificates Yesterday's dreams are solid coin 'oft times spent foolishly, and not just by youth (Our personal value diminishes only from within.) Trade then only value for value and what dreams you buy don't lose interest in for they not only must sustain but grow and lend their worth to the dreams that tomorrow might bring
9
To My 'Self ' I can't show you happy if I have only sad; there isn't much of good if all remembered is bad. I can't very well answer if it is I question why; it'd be hard to say, "Hello!" on my waygoodbye.
10
On the Eve of Christmas Now, three days past the longest night, eight reindeer and sleigh take flight; to spread the tide of Christ's birth and gift, carry word of His new year, spirits lift. So silent and swift the passing sleigh: yet, not one believing in His name would say, "I fail to see the tiny sleigh and deer, I really don't believe St. Claus was here." Down the chimneys of our hearts he goes, rekindling spirits fire; for he knows that no gift greater than His divine light, is seen in our spirit on Christmas night. Myth born an age and world far away, spun and imagined 'til this our day we would naught believe unless we heard: the bells, deer, sleigh and His spoken word? Wouldn't believe in easy joy, special laughter, can we believe now two thousand years after, that our God Father in the Heaven above gave to us His Son so much was His love? We needn't look to the sky, strain our ear, as it's from within He comes to us each year. As we lay gifts under the decorated tree, on the eve of Christmas, within us He'll be.
11
You love the snow, it's here again one might believe just for you as compliment; Brown eyes above reddened cheeks, which, above your smile finds not to 'while,' In moody passing, these days of snow, as it is you know warmth within.
Snow weights the leaf not fallen and it falls. Yet come Spring, one or two upon the tree remain much as life's moments in our memory.
dancing, falling, fluttering flake of snow (down from the northern heaven) the wind to blow from house top to bough window pane to frozen lake a child's dream a grown man's mistake
12
....would see again, about the neck of dawn, the gracing dove and dance the Spring: the feathered wing that lifted high that flowing wordLove.
Who among us wouldn't kiss the cheek of Spring bring to her hands flowers that are hers Who among us would despair the waiting of her day when she would be waiting there.
By Day's Light What stars are viewed in the night at least one we would hold tight. Yet, they're years and years away; ours, near, and viewed in the day.
Before Night Descending slowly, evening sun a day near now done lingering, in its red light a last visit, before night A moment shared, silently so then, it was, we had to go. 13
Often,
I go out at night just to look at the stars;
I wonder, "Just Who put them there?" "When will we reach so far?" Through my telescope I peer at the planets the stars; and I know. "Whether I'm alive or not, Man shall reach those tiny dots; Spread His knowledge through His land before He calls to man."
No tree may grow or flower bloom but first a seed has broken ground or life be lived but love is found
14
Friend Fred and his lady Jeannine twentyfive years this day have seen, Some were full and rich, some lean but through each he's love his queen. Silver, has shown through the years; has paid for wars and women's tears. It is found in nuggets and mountain side; for its possession, men have lived and died. So, it is, with the silver of two, from times of joy and moments blue, Of hard won smiles and easy laughter: that ounce of silver all men chase after! When we've reached the year 'twentyfive', it comes time to weight, if it's still alive, The ounce of joy which we first found: and rare the two that weigh a pound!
15
What a smile you have today one such as should never go away neither the sparkle in your eyes your grace of form or frame of mind but nothing lasts forever and should I be near when that sparkle become a tear that smile is inverted your frame of mind converted might you find words of mine able to bring them back again
16
It took the wind to fall the leaf a thousand years of rain from mountain top to sea to move one grain all the forces in the heaven above to bring the morning sun These none are mine to command I have but my hand to draw you close a kiss to express my love
17
Can we understand or know the seeds unremitting desire to grow to split the earth covering or crack even stone
Where within us is such to be found who among us last has lifted stone or gone beyond the bounds of earth and our reality to greet the sun Love's fire is never touched, only known none too few have sought to touch many have never broken ground among us though we can say, "I've felt the warmth of day!" and will live knowing the morrow'll come
18
A Peaceful Hearth Burns Home's hearth burns kindled still against evening's early morning chill with peace of knowing the keeper there tends well the house with love and care Restless though the grounds, outside as stormy winds stir about and nighttime things reside branches reach to knock asking to enter in and grasses whisper after secret kin Would one come on this wooded ground and see the active unsettledness around sad to say, the travelers turning wouldn't be slow and the house keepers' peace and love he'd never know Or, had he through her window seen the fire's flame and passed the grassy woods to knock and give his name it would indeed be sad if she continued to sit unable to brave the knowing and not answer it For he'd not pass the woods knock or give his name but that he'd have hers be one and the same Nor, she answer but she'd know that her house would be home that there he'd stay and he'd cease to roam 19
Budding are trees again one might not think it new 'tis first time the leaf grew
The Chase I shall follow be you quick and run you fast my pace too shall kept passing thee in waiting breath my heart your touch
Our greatest joys, loves are not found no hole lies atop the ground
20
Our measure in life is not found in one filling but in our ability to refill after spilling
What moments we know carrying us in which we're carried and we trust then down we're thrust Fearing even to touch again not realizing our greatest fear Having nearly touched yet remained here
He knows our love of Him though we choose to remain earth bound with kin whom we'd love yet once again
21
Felt again is the soil, which from time to time has seeped in to lie too thin on the cellar's floor There where a time or two before just enough has gained claim to that portion where the sun shines once in awhile There where a flower or tree has tried to grow, in that part of me called the cellar hole, is felt a reaching for the sun as roots draw and settle into me First time it came, the soil I mean, it was new, a delightful rich and growing thing and I played with it and enjoyed its company Another time after the first was washed away I sought to draw some in but it don't work that way Or so I'd thought way back then It makes me tired to even talk about it draws the cold and stirs the wind and I'd wonder if it would be best to seal up the cracks never let the soil in again to seal the open sky above keeping even the spiders' webs out to close the door as that not even a fly could drift in Then perhaps I could sleep down there and never have to wake, or feel the flowers reaching for the sun
22
Or perhaps, seal it up never reach down there again but walk and see only the sky filled with its countless little lights and burst with joy when the moon shines too These I could and perhaps else like tear it down or build a better one fill it in and sell it to some fool, like myself But, I know, it's all just thinking about And not such as even one of these could I do And, as I said, "I feel the soil seeping in again." I wonder, what yours will bring If you'll hold back because it's dark or help to bring the sun by clearing the branches which cover over and keeps it out I feel the thousands of tiny 'little particles' that are your 'self' beginning to lie thinly on the floor I wonder if it's just that I've drawn you and not because you wanted to come but because I felt I wanted you there Best would these all as one, be the reason why for if they were, I'm sure that that age old cellar would first feel the day time sky
23
Any less the reflected light of a flower bloomed by another day Its fragrance not fresh, any less in essence And, as we stoop to break its stem is our reaching halted momentarily in reflection of the bee having tasted first its life Or are our hearts less warmed by its sight because the sun gathered first its beauty And would we deny the flowers will or love of one, or any of these its desire to remain in keeping or await returning of one of those who first touched Deny would we the day of bloom refuse our self its fragrance yet call our love to be true and deny the flower its love of the sun Or, the sun feel cheated seeing it to have been touched in the night
24
Yet children in love and in life yet allowed to be as children in love and life as that the years which have yet to pass as that all that which is yet to shall pass and the children we are and that love which only children know shall not pass So we are now so it is that we shall be able to remain so shall it remain our love our life even beyond this life
25
A child grows
each thing new is seen, touched seen new again and grows into a world larger. (What was, what should have been is not.) dreams come and go are dreamt again that perhaps it may be Watching a child grow as a tree, a forested wood Watching the child grow only then is growing begun As a sapling seeks its height, its vista; it is not found 'til its growing is done
The man walks only because the child learned to laughs only because the child learned not to be afraid can read word of testament because the child had faith What lies in our path no man can overcome but first the child has. so, it is; our life The man might reach the stars but only that the child dreamt of them believed they could be touched The man might hear the cries of humanity but only because first he listened to his own The man might one day know love because the child has because the child knew of it.
26
Even if love is remembered as only a moment high in a mountain meadow a moment washed in its tiny brook a moment of warmth from a sun which lies in the center of the universe Even then, he might And if that high meadow that stony brook that sun lay beyond the distance of miles is lost in a wilderness of years yet, the child lives ... then that child's life lived is fuller than all the valleys and might well be for all mankind for the measure of will and faith
27
And we wondered if
it was out of necessity that the leaves and twigs of autumn filled the crags and nooks of the stones through which the brook did flow bringing the back water high and the one waterfall was joined by others Wondered why for no more water flowed it was only dispersed about the rocks and twigs and leaves Then we listened close and heard its song to us
Only 'good' can God do Satan but that which isn't 'Tis man which is of a free will 28