21. December 2013 · Comments Off on Saturday Silliness · Categories: Uncategorized

In one of the books that I had as a kid, this poem was published and illustrated with the most amusing line drawings – I couldn’t remember anything about it save for a couple of lines, but god bless google…

The Walloping Window Blind

A capital ship for an ocean trip
Was the Walloping Window Blind.
No gale that blew dismayed her crew
Or troubled the captain’s mind.

The man at the wheel was taught to feel
Contempt for the wildest blow.
And it often appeared when the weather had cleared
That he’d been in his bunk below.

The boatswain’s mate was very sedate,
Yet fond of amusement too;
And he played hopscotch with the starboard watch
While the captain tickled the crew.

And the gunner we had was apparently mad
For he stood on the cannon’s tail,
And fired salutes in the captain’s boots
In the teeth of a booming gale.

The captain sat in a commodore’s hat
And dined in a royal way
On toasted pigs and pickles and figs
And gummery bread each day.

But the rest of us ate from an odious plate
For the food that was given the crew
Was a number of tons of hot cross buns
Chopped up with sugar and glue.

We all felt ill as mariners will
On a diet that’s cheap and rude,
And the poop deck shook when we dipped the cook
In a tub of his gluesome food.

Then nautical pride we laid aside,
And we cast the vessel ashore
On the Gulliby Isles, where the Poohpooh smiles
And the Anagzanders roar.

Composed of sand was that favored land
And trimmed in cinnamon straws;
And pink and blue was the pleasing hue
Of the Tickletoeteasers claws.

We climbed to the edge of a sandy ledge
And soared with the whistling bee,
And we only stopped at four o’clock
For a pot of cinnamon tea.

From dawn to dark, on rubagub bark
We fed, till we all had grown
Uncommonly thin. Then a boat blew in
On a wind from the torriby zone.

She was stubby and square, but we didn’t much care,
And we cheerily put to sea.
We plotted a course for the Land of Blue Horse,
Due west ‘cross the Peppermint Sea.

— Charles Edward Carryl

21. December 2013 · Comments Off on One of My Favorite Christmas Carols · Categories: Uncategorized

From the chapel of King’s College, Cambridge, England. I’ve actually visited there – it’s a beautiful place.

 

20. December 2013 · Comments Off on Christmas Presents · Categories: Uncategorized

Mouse Angel

In anticipation of readers and fans receiving Kindle and Nook e-readers for Christmas, I will have another special sale, beginning Christmas Eve and running for four days only, until December 29th, when the prices on The Quivera Trail, The Adelsverein Trilogy (entire and in separate volumes), Daughter of Texas, Deep in the Heart and To Truckee’s Trail will be reduced to 25% off the usual price on Amazon and Barnes & Noble. This is for the e-book versions of those books only.

Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, and have a wonderful New Year.

(And thanks to those readers and fans who took advantage of the direct sale discount this week – just about made up for the absence of shoppers at Goliad this year!)

18. December 2013 · Comments Off on Lone Star Sons – Without a Trace · Categories: Chapters From the Latest Book · Tags: ,

Lone Star Sons Logo - Cover(Behold – the beginning of another thrilling episode of Lone Star Sons; on the track of a cattle drover who vanished on his return from New Orleans, somewhere along the Opelousas Trace. Lone Star Sons is a YA adventure series set in Texas during the time of the Texas Republic, featuring young Ranger Jim Reade and his Delaware Indian friend, Toby Shaw.)

“There’s something strange going on,” Jack’s guest said, when Jim came through the front door of Jack’s lodgings in Bexar. It was a bright autumn morning; the Plaza Mayor was alive with the bustle of the marketplace – the market-women in their bright skirts and shawls, presiding over piled up mounds of green and red peppers, yellow ears of corn. “My brother was due to return from New Orleans a month ago.” The strangers’ eyes went to Jim at once, and Jack said,
“Clay, this is Jim Reade – he’s one of my Rangers – Jim, you haven’t ever met Clayton Huff before, have you?”
“Not had the pleasure,” Jim said, as Clay Huff rose to exchange a handshake. Jack added, “Pull up a chair, Jim – since this is going to fall to you, since you’re from that part of Texas. Clay and his brother Randall run cattle near Bastrop – they’re distant kin to John White; he has a big place north of Anahuac. This summer Clay and Randall took a herd of theirs along the Opelousas trace to New Orleans … Clay, you tell him what happened, then.”
“It all went as we planned,” Clay sighed – he had a pleasant and open face, some years younger than Jim, but his face was lined and weather-burnt, as if he spent many hours in the open air. “We got to New Orleans, found a buyer and paid off all the hands. Randall, he was courting a pretty widow-lady, so he decided he would stay on for a week so he could escort her to church the next Sunday. I took my half of what we got for the sale of the cattle and came home straightaway to my wife an’ little childer by way of a coastal sloop to Copano. I’d had enough of riding the trail, I’ll tell you what.”
“How was your brother intending to return to Bastrop, then?” Jim asked, and Clay’s open countenance furrowed with lines of worry.
“The way we came – by way of the Opelousas trace. But he has just never shown up. I wrote to his lady-friend, and she answered that he set out on the Monday after they went to church. A neighbor of ours in Bastrop said that he passed an hour or so with him at the Sabine Crossing, so we know that he had come that far, but … Captain Hays, sir – Randall should have been home a month ago. I know that there’s misfortune can happen to a man … but my brother isn’t no fool. He had a brace of fine pistols, a dog and his own horse – and he was traveling on the trace! There ain’t no more public or well-traveled public road as that, and the Indians are all friendly-like. It’s like he vanished walking across the plaza outside, this very day and in broad daylight.” More »

17. December 2013 · Comments Off on Music for Christmas – In the Bleak Midwinter · Categories: Uncategorized

The choir and congregation at Gloucester Cathedral –

I’ll post more seasonal music as I find them.