Uncle Josh on a Bicycle
A LONG last summer Ruben Hoskins, that is Ezra Hoskins' boy, he cum
home from college and bro't one of them new fangled bisickle masheens
hum with him, and I think ever since that time the whole town of Punkin
Centre has got the bisickle fever. Old Deacon Witherspoon he's bin
a-ridin' a bisickle to Sunday school, and Jim Lawson he couldn't ride
one of them 'cause he's got a wooden leg; but he jist calculated if he
could git it hitched up to the mowin' masheen, he could cut more hay
with it than any man in Punkin Centre. Somebody sed Si Pettingill wuz
tryin' to pick apples with a bisickle.
Wall, all our boys and girls are ridin' bisickles now, and nothin'
would do but I must learn how to ride one of them. Wall, I didn't think
very favorably on it, but in order to keep peace in the family I told
them I would learn. Wall, gee whilikee, by gum. I wish you had bin thar
when I commenced.
I took that masheen by the horns and I led it out into the middle of the
road, and I got on it sort of unconcerned like, and then I got off sort
of unconcerned like. Wall, I sot down a minnit to think it over, and
then the trouble commenced. I got on that durned masheen and it jumped
up in the front and kicked up behind, and bucked up in the middle, and
shied and balked and jumped sideways, and carried on worse 'n a couple
of steers the fust time they're yoked. Wall, I managed to hang on fer a
spell, and then I went up in the air and cum down all over that
bisickle. I fell on top of it and under it and on both sides of it; I
fell in front of the front wheel and behind the hind wheel at the same
time. Durned if I know how I done it but I did. I run my foot through
the spokes, and put about a hundred and fifty punctures in a hedge
fence, and skeered a hoss and buggy clar off the highway. I done more
different kinds of tumblin' than any cirkus performer I ever seen in my
life, and I made more revolutions in a fifteen-foot circle than any
buzz-saw that ever wuz invented. Wall, I lost the lamp, I lost the
clamp, I lost my patience, I lost my temper,
I lost my self-respect, my last suspender button and my standin' in the
community. I broke the handle bars, I broke the sprockets, I broke the
ten commandments, I broke my New Year's pledge and the law agin loud and
abusive language, and Jim Lawson got so excited he run his wooden leg
through a knot-hole in the porch and couldn't git it out agin. Wall, I'm
through with it; once is enough fer me. You kin all ride your durned old
bisickles that want to, but fer my part I'd jist as soon stand up and
walk as to sit down and walk. No more bisickles fer your Uncle Josh, not
if he knows it, and your Uncle Josh sort of calculates as how he do.
—
Notoriety—A next door neighbor to glory, but another way of
gittin' it.
—Punkin Centre Philosophy.