MAYBE BABY, MAYBE I’M FALLING IN LOVE!
21 Friday Jul 2017
Posted Creative writing, lyrics, Lyrics for a song, Writings
in21 Friday Jul 2017
Posted Creative writing, lyrics, Lyrics for a song, Writings
in16 Sunday Jul 2017
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, History, Poems, Writings
in15 Saturday Jul 2017
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, History, Lyrics for a song, Poems
in15 Saturday Jul 2017
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, History, Poems, Writings
in24 Sunday Jan 2016
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, Humor, Nonsensical, Writings
inTags
Mister Martin MacNamara makes marvelously meticulous metropolitan maps.
His wife Wilma weaves wonderfully whimsical well-favored Welsh wigs.
Her brother Barton bakes beautifully broiled butter battered Belgian buns.
His son Sammy stocks sensationally sweet Southern sarsaparilla sodas, and
his sister Sally stacks staggeringly striking sporty Spanish sombreros.
Their uncle Usual unloads upliftingly Utopian utterances under-fined until undermined. Understand? Neither do I.
That’s why his boss Buzzby just barks!
by John Patrick Seekamp 2016
19 Tuesday Jan 2016
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, Observations, Poems, Sea tales, Writings
inTags
After a storm, Breakers, Darkened skies, Storm surge, Stormy Seas, The beach in a storm, Waves crashing
Behold skies darkened from a high hill below,
Winds whipping and clipping and bringing a throw,
There by quiet’s leaving as the spraying surged so,
Down where the beach sands are frenzied and tossed,
Down where the sea birds and coasters are lost,
The mischievous embroiling of the boisterous flossed,
And darkened skies watched from below,
So then behold the battering blow.
Oh behold the tumbling swill,
Waves lashing and smashing and crashing at will,
Down by the rocks where the foamy waters mill,
There where the oceans churn and fling white,
There where the breakers and shoreline do fight,
A grievous turmoiling of tumultuous might,
So watch for the tumbling swill,
And then behold the calm coming still.
by John Patrick Seekamp 2016
12 Tuesday Jan 2016
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, Humor, Observations, Poems, Uncategorized, Writings
inThe tin can Tin Man that hung on our door,
There guarding us all day and night,
He secretly wanted to drop to the floor,
And walk to his heart felt delight,
But the way he was hooked he couldn’t get down,
The wire was wrapped all too tight,
He tried and he tried ’til his smile was a frown,
It’s no use, he thought of the plight,
Weeks by weeks, years by years, there he remained the same height,
Struggling hard not to give in to tears,
But not letting his dream go from sight,
Then late one eve as my family and I slept,
With the moon shining cloudless and bright,
The nail popped loose from where it was kept,
And from the door our can man took flight,
At first he stumbled and then he ran,
The clanging of his metal was quite,
All the neighborhood dogs they barked with a ban,
Giving the tin can Tin Man a good fright,
But it was when he came to a junkyard he stopped,
What is this I now see—-is that right?
And then the wooden fence he climbed up and hopped,
Soon his chest it pounded with might,
You see, in his heart he knew what he saw was his mate,
A female version of a knight,
And from that day forth they followed their fate,
For they had nine little tin cans outright!
by John Patrick Seekamp 2016
12 Tuesday Jan 2016
Posted Adventure, Creative writing, Fiction, Humor, lyrics, Lyrics for a song, Observations, Poems, Writings
inTags
Adventure in India, Asia, British Aristocracy, Getting out and doing something, Hunting from an elephant, Idea for a play, Jungles, lyrics, Maharajas, Song, Song lyrics, The wilds, Tiger hunt
While some prefer a quietude,
A chess and checkers attitude,
I prefer a good ol’ tiger hunt,
Instead of banters light and pleasant,
Of latest fashions and lunch of pheasant,
I travel India to kill—-and that is blunt,
I have no time for a leisure tea or a leisure life lived leisurely,
So off to the jungles of Asia I do go,
Though hunting big cats tops the list,
A nasty pig sticking I’ve rarely missed,
And a shot at a rhino or a croc I’ll often throw,
Yes once I was a proper aristocrat,
Wearing a lounge coat or a suit, cane, and top hat,
But soon that life became too boring,
For this old bird who’d rather go soaring,
I’m just a world class man of the wilds—-and that is that,
Just a onetime and former proper aristocrat!
You see, a Maharaja friend of mine,
Invited me to spend some time,
High atop his favorite elephant’s back,
So instead of sitting around in Surrey,
I hopped a boat and left all worry,
To those torn between a bauble and a knickknack,
In their fancy dress and fancy hats,
With their fancy pampered pussy cats,
They dare to dabble in discussions much too droll,
And while I’m out risking life and limb,
They’re sitting in fan cooled rooms lit dim,
Slowly snacking on kippered salmon served up whole,
Yes once I was a proper aristocrat,
Wearing a lounge coat or a suit, cane, and top hat,
But soon that life became too boring,
For this old bird who’d rather go soaring,
I’m just a world class man of the wilds—-and that is that,
Just a onetime and former proper aristocrat!
To conclude,
So to those who prefer the safe idle comforts of the parlor,
And not being out here on the trail of a growler or snarler,
Go ahead and shout “Muggins” in a card game or such,
While I hold the wonders of adventure in my clutch,
With gratitude—-it’s the wilds, or the jungles, or the brush, or the thickets for me,
With platitude—-after champagne and caviar, enjoy your cribbage my dear friends and fam-i-ly!
Yes once I was a proper aristocrat,
Wearing a lounge coat or a suit, cane, and top hat,
But soon that life became too boring,
For this old bird who’d rather go soaring,
I’m just a world class man of the wilds—-and that is that,
I’m Just a onetime and former proper aristocrat,
Just a onetime and former proper aristocrat!
by John Patrick Seekamp 2016
01 Sunday Nov 2015
Tags
A ghastly tale, A macabre tale, Breathing, Darkness, Horror, Mystery, No heart beat, Spooky, Suspense, Tale of terror, Tales to frighten you
The wind was strong as it beat its gusted fists against the walls of the inn where I had taken a room. It was late and moonless, and once again as with other nights, darkness surrounded the flicker of my candle light. I was tired and stiff and aching all over. I was lying in my bed. As I lay there I thought back on the day just past. I tried to remember all that it was. I thought of the words that I spoke, and the words and sounds that I heard. Then I thought of the strange letter that I found on the floor near the door to my room. I don’t know where it came from. Someone must have slipped it under the door. But I don’t know who would have done such a thing. The strange part is that the letter, once I removed it from the blank envelope it was in, read simply, ‘I yet breathe.’ I yet breathe, I said in my head. Over and over I thought it. I yet breathe. I yet breathe. Then I was distracted. Oh that wind, I thought. Must it carry on so. Why can’t it just stop for a while. I yet breathe. I yet breathe, I continued to think as I lay there on my back under a blanket of wool. I yet breathe. Who could have written those words. And why.
Then I could hear that the wind slowed, and then sped up, only to slow once more. I yet breathe, I repeated in thought twice more and then once more again. “A joke,” I said aloud. “It must be a joke someone is playing on me. Of course! What else could it be. Just someone’s sick idea of a joke. But who?!” Oh that awful wind. Why doesn’t it stop. Please. Please just stop! That envelope. There was nothing on that envelope. No name. No stamp. Nothing. Nothing to go by. Just the words on the folded paper inside that envelope. The words, ‘I yet breathe.’ But who yet breathes. Who yet breathes?
But then I realized that I had to calm myself. I still ached all over but especially in my chest and I felt my heart racing. I can feel my pulse in my neck and head as well, I thought. I must now slow my breathing and wipe my sweat. Then from under my bedroom door I heard what sounded like someone breathing. Breathing in and breathing out. Over and over, in and out. It seemed to get louder as then the wind competed with it. In and out they both went. In. Out. In. Out. Then I thought of the letter. Those words, ‘I yet breathe.’ As I heard those words rattling in my brain I became more excited with breath and sweat, and my heart raced more now than before. Oh I ache so, I thought. But that letter. ‘I yet breathe.’ ‘I yet breathe.’ What could it mean.
It was then that the breathing that I heard coming from under the door and the wind beating against the building picked up to such a pace and such strength that both the bed and the entire room shook violently. So much so that things began to fall and crash all about me and all throughout the room. My heart was then pounding as hard as ever before. I began breathing faster and faster and also began sweating more. Then, although it hurt to do so, I sat up and I began to hyperventilate. I must have moved the bed because at that moment the candle fell from the nightstand onto the floor and the flame went out. It was then pitch black in the room. Then I noticed a silence. I noticed that there was no wind. I noticed that there was no breathing from under the door. Then it soon occurred to me that my heart wasn’t racing anymore. In fact, and as incredible as it may sound, my heart was not only not racing anymore, but it wasn’t even beating anymore. I felt my neck and my wrist and anywhere else one would feel for a pulse. But there was none to be found. I had no pulse. I was still breathing. But I couldn’t feel my heart beating. In and out I breathed. In and out. But still no heart beat.
But then, for what ever strange reason, I remembered something terrible that happened on the previous night. Something that happened as I drove from town the horse and carriage I had borrowed from Langtree, the inn’s owner. I remember that I had just passed through the crossroad at Purgatory Corners when suddenly the wheels of the carriage ran over something rather large. Something big enough to nearly jolt me clear off the seat. I do remember quickly stopping the horses and looking back and seeing what appeared to be a crumpled up black blanket or such. It was, after all, dark out and I had to strain to see even that much. But then in my recollection I suddenly remembered the worst part. As I peered down at that crumpled mass, I could swear I saw what appeared to me as a human hand. A man’s hand. Then as I recalled further, I suddenly snapped the reigns and drove off. But why? Why would I do such a foul thing. Why didn’t I get out of the carriage and investigate what must of been a tragedy. Why didn’t I help if help was needed. I…I…I must have panicked. And then I must have later blocked it completely out of my mind. For why else haven’t I thought of it until just now. It must have been a man that the carriage ran over. That I ran over. Oh why in heaven didn’t I help the poor soul. I’m still breathing, yet still I have no heart beat, I thought. Why don’t I have a heart beat. It is dark. There is no longer any wind blowing hard or otherwise. And the only breathing, or sound of any kind for that matter, that I now hear is of my own breath. Then, as I grew more and more tired, I must have fallen asleep.
After a while I heard talking. Men talking. Then, once I tried to listen closer, I could make out just what it was they were saying.
One said, “Poor Henry. Poor devil. His chest seems to be crushed, and his arms broken.” It’s Tom Handley I thought, the local constable. And that’s Doc Benton he’s talking to. I tried to call out their names but I couldn’t. I just couldn’t speak. Not at all. Why can’t I speak, I thought.
“Lucky I guess that you found him, Tom and brought him here the way you did and all. I mean before anyone else had the misfortune to stumble upon the poor lifeless devil. Where exactly was it you said you found him laying out there, Tom? I was too busy looking for and trying to find a pulse rather than to hearing what it was you were telling me.”
“About a hundred feet or so just this side of Purgatory Corners. You know….out at the crossroad.”
“Oh. Yeh. That god forsaken place. As far as I’m concerned it’s cursed, and that’s the way it always will be. Poor soul. He must’ve got run over. What a shame this had to happen this way. What a rotten shame.”
What do they mean, I thought. Then as I breathed in and out slowly, noticing that I still could, I remembered the letter. I set it on the bureau on the other side of my bed. The letter that read, ‘I yet breathe.’ I yet breathe. I yet breathe, I repeated. Yes. I do. I…yet…breathe! The paper the words are on. The paper is the same as I use. That must be it. I must have written the words, ‘I yet breathe’. And they just said that they found me right where I saw that poor man lying. That poor soul that I ran over. And they also just said that I must have been run over. Yes. It must be so. Then yes it must be so that I wrote the letter to let those who brought me here know that I do yet breathe. I do yet breathe. I…yet…breathe! But wait. Tom and Doc. They must not know that I yet breathe. They must think that I am dead. Doc Benton just said, ‘poor lifeless devil’. Poor soul? Dead? Could it be? Could it be that the man on the road two nights ago. The dead man. The man that I ran over. That man….that man was me? Then I guess he was me. No. I am sure of it. He is me. I was the one run over, and I was the one who did it! Oh god. But…but…I yet breathe. I yet breathe!
The letter. I know now that I wrote it. But if only they could find it. Oh Tom and Doc. You must find that letter. You must find it and read it. Please find that letter and read that I yet breathe!
Then I heard the words, “Doc. Have a look at this. I found it on the floor next to the bed, over on this side. It’s a letter, and all it says is, ‘I yet breathe.’ ”
“Let me see it,” the Doc said. “Why that’s Henry’s writing.” Then there was a pause. Then I heard, “Can it be? Oh god, can it be? Henry. Henry!”
I felt my heart beat once again. It was faint, but it was beating. I tried to answer, but I couldn’t. But then….I yet Breathe. I…Yet…Breathe!
The End
by John Patrick Seekamp 2015
30 Friday Oct 2015
Posted Creative writing, Fiction, Haikus, Observations, Poems, Writings
inTags
Callicoon, Changing leaves, Clouds, Fast flowing, Haiku, Long Eddy, Mountains, Upper Delaware River, Wind from east
Big river flows fast,
Orange and yellow grace mountain,
Clouds ride wind from east.
by John Patrick Seekamp 2015