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131

FARMER STEBBINS AWHEEL.

I went to Brooklyn visitin' to see what I could see,
An' twenty thousan' bicycles come rushin' after me;
I couldn't even cross the road, or stop to look around,
But some one's wheel was sure to want that very inch of ground;
An' those at whom I shook my fist at scarin' of me thus
Would call me names an' skitter off, 'fore I could clinch the fuss.
An' some of them was double-bent, with noses near the ground,
As if their pocketbooks was lost, an' hadn't yet been found;
An' some was steamin' 'long the road, in reg'lar engine-shape,
As if they'd stole a dollar-bill, an' wanted to escape;
An' some was wildly chewin' gum, industrious as could be,
As if they'd lately took a job to gnaw a hemlock tree;
An' some had faces of despair, as if on frenzy's brink,
An' some was men an' some was boys, an' some was girls—I think;
An' some was ladies lady-dressed, an' lookin' fine an' neat
As that same number of bouquets a-glidin' down the street;
An' when a man about my size come ridin' with a dame,
I says, “If he can pump a wheel, then I can do the same.”
A little boy with turn-up nose an' unregenerate eye
Had overheard my loud remarks, an' told the followin' lie:
He says to me, “The cycles all have big improvements, now,
An' any one can ride 'em though he hasn't first learned how”;
An' so I hired a stout machine from some one in a store,
An' mounted on, an' started off the village to explore.
The snub-nose boy he helped me up with all the strength he had,
Then give a push, an' hollered out, “A pleasant journey, Dad!”

132

An' so it was, a rod or two; when, like some livin' dunce,
The lean an' slippery critter tried to go two ways at once;
An' like a polertician-chap, I strove to do the same,
An' felt the ground reverberate beneath my massive frame.
I looked around to find the boy: he wasn't nowhere seen,
An' I raised up the bicycle, a-feelin' rather green;
An' then I said, “There's some mistake; I'll try the thing ag'in,
An' it will probably behave, when I have broke it in.”
An' so I leaped upon its back, an' started off once more;
An' promptly felt the earth ag'in, through all the clothes I wore.
An' then I sort o' twisted 'round, an' rose into a rage,
An' started wildly in once more, the critter to engage;
An' hollered loud, so all the folks come runnin' 'round to see,
“You little beast, you think you'll get the upper han's of me?
Perhaps you think a farmer bold hain't pluck to bring you down,
That's broke some thirty colts to bit, an' half the mules in town!”
An' then I strove for victory, with all my varied powers,
For ten good minutes by the clock, but seemin'ly for hours;
An' every time I made a move my mastery to display,
The little wretch would twist itself in some new-fashioned way;
An' sometimes it would lie an' rest, as placid as could be,
Then I'd be on my back, an' it a-grinnin' down at me;
An' then 'twould rear up like a horse, an' weave an' twist awhile,
An' I would stan' upon my head, in reg'lar circus-style;
An' then 'twould kind o' paw the earth, an' wave its hinder wheel,
An' I would turn a somerset, and give a frenzied squeal;
Until at last I laid amongst a million laughin' folks,
My head upon a pavin'-stone—my legs between some spokes;
An' shouted, as I give my neck a slow an' painful turn,
“Bring me that snub-nose boy that said we didn't have to learn!
Give me the man that first among a trustin' people came
An' set at large this dang'rous beast with ‘Safety’ for its name!
I'll whip 'em with each other in as good a shape, you'll see,
As this 'ere bunch of metal bones has threshed the earth with me!”