Two Thousand Miles on an Automobile eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about Two Thousand Miles on an Automobile.

Two Thousand Miles on an Automobile eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 280 pages of information about Two Thousand Miles on an Automobile.

CHAPTER ONE SOME PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS THE MADDING CROWD

Any woman can drive an electric automobile, any man can drive a steam, but neither man nor woman can drive a gasoline; it follows its own odorous will, and goes or goes not as it feels disposed.

For this very wilfulness the gasoline motor is the most fascinating machine of all.  It possesses the subtle attraction of caprice; it constantly offers something to overcome; as in golf, you start out each time to beat your own record.  The machine is your tricky and resourceful opponent.  When you think it conquered and well-broken to harness, submissive and resigned to your will, behold it is as obstinate as a mule,—­balks, kicks, snorts, puffs, blows, or, what is worse, refuses to kick, snort, puff, and blow, but stands in stubborn silence, an obdurate beast which no amount of coaxing, cajoling, cranking will start.

One of the beauties of the beast is its strict impartiality.  It shows no more deference to maker than to owner; it moves no more quickly for expert mechanic than for amateur driver.  When it balks, it balks,—­inventor, manufacturer, mechanic, stand puzzled; suddenly it starts,—­they are equally puzzled.

Who has not seen inventors of these capricious motors standing by the roadside scratching their heads in despair, utterly at a loss to know why the stubborn thing does not go?  Who has not seen skilled mechanics in blue jeans and unskilled amateurs in jeans of leather, so to speak, flat on their backs under the vehicle, peering upward into the intricacies of the mechanism, trying to find the cause,—­the obscure, the hidden source of all their trouble?  And then the probing with wires, the tugs with wrenches, the wrestling with screw-drivers, the many trials,—­for the most part futile,—­the subdued language of the bunkers, and at length, when least expected, a start, and the machine goes off as if nothing at all had been the matter.  It is then the skilled driver looks wise and does not betray his surprise to the gaping crowd, just looks as if the start were the anticipated result of his well-directed efforts instead of a chance hit amidst blind gropings.

One cannot but sympathize with the vanity of the French chauffeur who stops his machine in the midst of a crowd when it is working perfectly, makes a few idle passes with wrenches and oil-cans, pulls a lever and is off, all for the pleasure of hearing the populace remark, “He understands his machine.  He is a good one.”  While the poor fellow, who really is in trouble, sweats and groans and all but swears as he works in vain to find what is the matter, to the delight of the onlookers who laugh at what seems to them ignorance and lack of skill.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Two Thousand Miles on an Automobile from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.