MOVING ON.....2024

A Note From The Author: Jacqueline E. Hughes

I am so happy to welcome in the new year, 2024!!! My Blog is changing-up a bit....mainly because I am evolving. Travel will always take precedence in my life and, my journeys will be shared with you. This 2024 version will offer a variety of new stories and personal ideas, as well. This is all about having fun and enjoying this Beautiful Journey called......Life!!!

Thursday, May 9, 2024

A PHOTOGRAPHER’S NOTES AND MORE

 


A series of essays and poems….




                          THE PINK AND PURPLE MIST OF THE SMOKY MOUNTAINS

~A HISTORY OF BEAUTY, WAR, INDIGENOUS AMERICANS, AND HARD WORK~



….as seen through my eyes!





By: Jacqueline E Hughes



I feel as though I am only borrowing the innocent things that surround me: the sky, an old barn, people in history, memories of mine and others, the soil, grass, and stone of a place we particularly love, and time itself. But I am placing them neatly and securely within containers without depth or dimension; digital photographs taken to preserve actions in time that excited my being then as they do at this exact moment.


I am pleased to think that my photographs, trapped within the ethos of time, past and present, reach out to those I might capture in the near and distant future. It warms me to believe that our own future transcends time and space and provides hope for us far beyond our known experiences.


I write about these experiences from a poetic perspective and become one with the history of beauty, war, Indigenous Americans, buildings that communicate with me, and make tangible all of the long, hard work our forefathers endured throughout the years in order to create a better life for us.




WINDOWS


With blades of grass and stone, alike, immortally drenched in 

                    rain and blood,

The history that surrounds this dampened paradise attracts 

                    the brave and the bold. 

I can feel the past running through my lug-bottom soles 

                    as I walk each path and trail. 

With weapon of choice strapped ‘round my neck just waiting 

                    to capture and behold,

Each footstep marked in the crooks and crannies…marching,

                    marching without fail.










Dilapidated barn just around the bend, if only you could talk to

                    me on this sunny day,

I know what you might say to this wayward traveler so keen 

                    on capturing your image:

“Cling righteously to what’s transpired, before my hat of rusty tin and swayback walls near collapse. Lambs and calves were born and sheltered within my bosom before the stink of automobile exhaust, acid rain, and time contributed to my inevitable demise.”



As hard work’s sweat soaked through clothes and bloodied

                    hands gripped the plow,

These men and women, born of guts and glory, raised 

                    offspring who endured hard times;

Knew the true meaning of survival as they faced every

                    challenge known to humankind.

Were the encircling mountains a blessing or a curse as

                    Sunday’s bells began to chime; 

Truly massive hurdles that bone-weary bodies translated into 

                    obstacles so unkind?









Somehow, we often remember you in cold, gray tones of         

                    silver-coated copper plates,

With each image bearing the bitter smell of the 

                    photographer’s flash powder light.

Have the bright and vivid colors of Indigenous Americans 

                    blended with your own,

After the Cherokee tribes, forced to leave, began to shed 

                    their Trail of Tears?

Sadly, ten years later, Congress grants them money used to 

                    purchase their own land.



We delight in all your glory, from trees of burnt sienna to fields

                    in every shade of green.

And, purple misted mountains slowly blackening in the fading 

                    light of the setting sun!

You grace us with your ‘pure light’ from early morning hours 

                    into the magenta and blue evenings.         

We drive long distances to see you; envying those who already 

                    call you home. 

Western North Carolina, an illuminated gemstone that fills me 

                    with eternal joy!



Wishing all of you who nurture, have nurtured, love and guide a child (all children) through the world we live in—and help to make them the strong, kind, loving beings they were meant to be! Happy Mother’s Day, this Sunday and each day of the year!




Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline E Hughes

All rights reserved


Photo Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline E Hughes

All rights reserved