In a museum, or forgotten barn, A small red twelve inch two wheeler Hangs on invisible wires, Or is covered in pigeon droppings and dust. But Tannehill rode it once, Like something in a dream. He was too long-framed for it. He controlled it, rounded the corner, Pedalling hard down the sidewalk, Across the street from our new house. I gawked from the front yard: He was a boy with his bike, Like The ****** on T.V. It was the first I learned to ride, And the falls were magnificient, On grass or asphalt. Girls' bikes were easy, One size fits all. Then I learned to pedal Beneath the cross bar of the big boys'. Push the pedals, Shift the midrift, and be gone. Always from somewhere To somewhere else, Far from the soft front lawn.
"Leave It to ******:" "And Jerry Mathers, as the ******."