I
found my bicycle (I didn’t know I had one) in the same place I must have left
it. Which enables me to remark that, crippled though I was, I was no mean
cyclist, at that period. This is how I went about it. I fastened my crutches to
the cross-bar, on either side, I propped the foot of my stiff leg (I forget
which, now they’re both stiff) on the projecting front axle, and I pedaled with
the other. It was a chainless bicycle, with a free-wheel, if such a bicycle
exists. Dear bicycle, I shall not call you bike, you were green, like so many
of your generation, I don’t know why. It is a pleasure to meet it again. To
describe it at length would be a pleasure. It had a little red horn instead of
the bell fashionable in your days. To blow this horn was for me a real
pleasure, almost a vice. I will go further and declare that if I were obliged
to record, in a roll of honour, those activities which in the course of my
interminable existence have given me only a mild pain in the balls, the blowing
of a rubber horn—toot!—would figure among the first. (15)
[Sam Beckett.]
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