Before the lad invested we had comfort here indeed;
Our lives were as an open book, and he who ran might read;
But now we live in other worlds, for since the motor came
My yoke-mate neer confides in me, or treats me quite the same.He used to be a candid man I like him very well
But lately I must pick the truth from what he does not tell;
The news he gives is watered, too, so when theres been defeat
I get one version here from him another down the street.
The madness got him bit by bit I marked its sure advance;
An angashore upon a bike would land him in a trance;
Hed leave me talking to myself and watch it forge ahead,
And then hed slowly stir himself and ask, "Whats that you said'"
Next, like a plague, loquacious men of marked civility
Swooped down, from heaven alone knows where, upon the presbytery;
Each bird of prey a cushat dove in downy meekness dressed,
And each a fine philanthropist to save him from the rest.
And then typed letters came in sheaves, and pamphlets, too,
galore,
The table there was strewn with them I counted ten and more;
And morning, noon, and night hed sit absorbing their contents,
The two heels round the bishop stuck with grave irreverence.
Ive never seen a homing soul so doubt-tossed, I must say,
Hed spurn the faith tomorrow, that was in him strong today:
For "someone told him something", and unto that hed cling;
Twas this mysterious "chap I met" who tells him every-thing.
The latest always was the best the very thing he sought
Much better than "the rubbish" which my neighbours curate bought;
Twas fitted up with this and that it was in short immense;
Twould do sick-calls around the earth like falling off a fence.
He talked and talked like one possessed as on the madness ran;
Such folly surely never gripped the mind of any man:
"Ignition this", "combustion that" I never heard the likes,
Youd think the world was spinning round on works of motor-bikes.
I took a stand as rectors should, and fussed and fumed and that,
And lavished pointed rhetoric and wisdom on the cat;
But on he went from bad to worse: bedad, it shocked me much
To hear him speak of dignitaries as cylinders and such.
The horsepower of the clergy, too, I heard him dwell upon,
And Im "a last years model", faith, "with no kick-starter
Still, he laughs best who laughs the last, when all is said and done,
For when the smelly thing arrived, twas then we had the fun.
He donned the goggles arid the coat, the cap, the gloves, the
scarf,
And pushed it to the stable-yard, supported by the staff
He jacked the wheel and kicked with fine spectacular disdain,
It gave a sort of wheezy cough, and so he kicked again.
Still no result: then, undismayed, he played the second card:
He pushed it off the stand, he did, and wheeled it round the yard;
He wheeled it up, he wheeled it down, until he near expired,
He forced the groom to take a turn, but, faith, he soon got tired.
The small lads gave him useful hints, he told them to be gone,
And when he chased them off the fence he turned the petrol on;
Then, man, he gave a thumping kick and swung into the seat,
And here my hero motor-man goes shooting down the Street.
Along the kings highway he sped on what he calls "his
top";
Upon his top: How are you! Heth, he found he couldnt stop;
His tank was full of "juice", it seems, and in his misery
He worked it out the wicked thing would wheel him to the sea.
But through it all the mind was clear, he dodged the straying
stock,
If tour he must, twere wise, he thought, to tour around the block:
So round and round and round he went, the eyes fixed straight ahead,
And every time at Mrs Flynns the congregation spread,
And every time he passed the house which Granny Heafy leased,
That pious person jerked the knee, respectful to the priest;
So round and round and round he went with bump and swerve and skid
Of course he never told me this, but fifty people did.
Now troubles soon forgot, it seems, by all these motor-men;
I hoped hed sell the wretched thing, but on he came again:
The front veranda corner there is like a tinkers shop;
Bad cess to it! I dont know where the thing is going to stop.
Hes made this house a meeting-place for faddists and the
likes,
And clerical mechanics come debating motor-bikes;
They talk a man unconscious with their cranks and gears and springs,
And bore and stroke, and this and that, and sparkling-plugs and things.
Now God be with the good old times for ever dead and gone,
When in this cheery room of mine I led the banter on;
For though we spoke of grave affairs, or touched the lighter side,
No man need sit and twirl his thumbs, because disqualified.
Well, youth must have its fling, I ween, and face the future,
still
The old grey horse and I shall jog together down the hill;
Weve come a long, hard, weary way, nor shirked the bonded load,
Well carry on and see it through, Old Comrade of the road.
No, not for us the whirring wheel that greets the mornings
call,
We only have "one speed", my boy, and thats no speed at all:
The evening finds us laid aside, and dreaming in the sun
Two "last years models" right enough, with engines nearly done.
But tell them this: Ere roads were made, by bridle-track we went,
And won the bush with church and school across a con-tinent;
The journeys oer; the chapters writ; and take it how we like,
The big things now are waiting for the young mans motor-bike.