Fondling only to throttle the nuzzling moment
Smuggled under the table, hungry or not
We roughride over the sleepers, finger the menu,
Avoid our neighbours’ eyes and wonder what
Mad country moves beyond the steamed-up window
So fast into the past we could not keep
Our feet on it one instant. Soup or grapefruit?
We had better eat to pass the time, then sleep
To pass the time. The water in the carafe
Shakes its hips, both glass and soup plate spill,
The tomtom beats in the skull, the waiters totter
Along their invisible tightrope.
For good or ill, For fish or meat, with single tickets only,
Our journey still in the nature of a surprise,
Could we, before we stop where all must change,
Take one first risk and catch our neighbours’ eyes?
If air travel is going to be affected by current events, and “staycations” are the thing for now, then this poem is rather appropriate.
Louis Macneice (1907–1963) turns an indolent, pleasurable holiday journey by train into a metaphor for life itself, rather as Walter de la Mare did in The Railway Junction.
We are rushing into the future, intent only on idle pleasures. The waiters on their “invisible tightrope” remind us that the pleasant life requires an army of servants. And life is not a rehearsal because the journey is “still in the nature of a surprise” and we have “single tickets only”.
This poem has something of the atmosphere of the 1930s about it, although I think it is actually a later poem, from around 1960.