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Historic Article
On Wings of Love
By S. Conant Foster
Outing And The Wheelman
March 1884
Freshets rushing,
Bridges crushing,
Stay the way of
Train and team -
What bold stranger
Braves the danger?
Who doth cross yon
Angry stream?
Strong and swiftly,
Deep and deftly,
Dip his paddles
In the tide;
Bravely done, sir!
Nobly won, sir!
See! he gains the
Other side.
Wheel he carries,
Waits nor tarries,
Mounts, and quickly
Rolls away;
While in wheeling,
Joyous feeling
Vents in happy
Roundelay.
"'Cycle, 'cycle,
Whirling 'cycle,
Tell thy rider,
An' thou please,
What sweet saying
Love betraying,
Thou dost whisper
To the breeze.
"Nay, my beauty,
'Tis thy duty
To unfold thy
Wisdom. Come!
Voice thy learning
To thy turning;
What! in whisper
Still art dumb?
"Rogue of metal!
Leaf and petal,
Twig and shrub on
Either side;
Wondering prattle,
As we rattle;
Tell them why so
Swift we ride.
"Still, dost falter?
At the altar,
All impatient,
Waits a bride;
That is why we
Hurry by thee,
That is why so
Swift we ride.
"On! O 'cycle!
Knavish 'cycle!
Churl to make thy
Master speak;
On to meet her!
On to greet her!
On! till journals
Smoke and creak.
"Hark! O 'cycle!
From St. Michael
Tolls the appointed
Hour of four;
Hurry! speed ye!
Fly! for heed ye,
She doth signal
From the door."
The Wheelman's Joy
Victorian Cycling Poetry and Words About Wheels
Other historic cycling articles:
A Burglar, A Bicycle, and A Storm (Fiction—1896)
A Cycle of the Seasons: A Bicycle Romance in Four Meets (Fiction—1883)
A Cycle Show in Little (1896)
A Header (?) (Poem—1883)
A Modern Love Sung in Ancient Fashion (Poem—1884)
Bicycling and Tricycling (1884)
Cycling for Women (1888)
Cycling's Value As An Exercise (1879)
Is Bicycling Harmful? (1896)
The Evolution of a Sport (1897)
Foreign [Bicycling News] (1884)
A Midwinter-Night's Dream (An homage to Dickens' A Christmas Carol, cycling style —1883)
On Wings of Love (Poem—1884)
Rosalind A Wheel (Fiction—1896)
Snakes in his Wheel (1895)
The Work of Wheelmen for Better Roads (1896)
Woman's Cycle (1896)
Back to Historical Articles Index
An article about us in Bicycling magazine:
"How To Bike Like A Victorian"
http://www.bicycling.com/culture/people/old-doesn-t-mean-bad-modern-conversation-victorian-era-cyclists
A few of Sarah's accounts of our Victorian cycling adventures:
The Flower Fields of the Skagit Valley:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/my-recent-trip-to-the-skagit-valley
A Trip to A Lavender Festival:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/sneak-peek-into-a-future-book
The Tricycle's Maiden Voyage:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/the-tricycles-maiden-voyage
The Chilly Hilly ride:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/chilly-hilly
Port Townsend to Port Gamble:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/port-gamble-wa
Sarah ALWAYS wears a corset—even while cycling. Here's an excerpt from her book about it:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/cycling-in-a-corset-a-short-excerpt-from-victorian-secrets
Rebuttal of an erroneous article:
http://www.thisvictorianlife.com/blog/a-rebuttal-to-a-recent-article
In a seaport town in the late 19th-century Pacific Northwest, a group of friends find themselves drawn together —by chance, by love, and by the marvelous changes their world is undergoing. In the process, they learn that the family we choose can be just as important as the ones we're born into. Join their adventures in
The Tales of Chetzemoka
First Wheel in Town:
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Love Will Find A Wheel:
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A Rapping At The Door:
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Delivery Delayed:
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Love's Messenger
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